View Full Version : Why don't they make dirt bikes with carbon fibre frames?
cheese
26th January 2011, 21:10
I was in kiwivelo the other day and they were showing me the latest in mountain bikes. They have a $16,000 bike that had a carbon fibre frame and it was so incredibly light. So any ideas as to why they haven't used them on dirtbikes to get the extra edge that they all try so hard to get?
honda_power
26th January 2011, 21:23
iv seen a few pics of carbon fiber subframes being used in japan... they would cost a shitload to produce and cant be used in ama etc unless they are available to the public
flyingcr250
26th January 2011, 21:25
i think id rather have steel or alloy.......just for piece of mind ha ha ha
Crisis management
26th January 2011, 21:27
The only carbon fibre frame I know of (yes, I know I'm old and my memory is shot, but bear with me...) is the Ducati Moto GP bike and that has been fraught with difficulty, simply put, it is easier to achieve the desired flexibility (feedback) and life with an aluminium or steel frame than carbon fibre.
If light weight was the singular goal then carbon fibre may be the solution but you need to ensure the frame will last 400? hours of use in an environment where it will collide with stuff, get stuffed into other bikes and generally be beaten up. Carbon doesn't like collisions and impacts so won't last long in the crash and bash of competition (or even trail rides).
Give it 5 more years and I will be eating these words......
hayd3n
26th January 2011, 21:30
i was reading somewhere where they had invented a new super metal but cant remember where
scott411
27th January 2011, 05:47
flex is needed in a frame, even the first alloy frames were to stiff and the riders hated them, the 97 CR250 is still talked about as being the worst handling bike ever,
every brand always talk about putting more flex into alloy frames to make them feel better to the riders,
steel frames are easier to set up because of the flex that is built in it,
peadub
27th January 2011, 12:56
The new Husaberg 4 strokes have a plastic (cross-lined high-strength polyethylene) subframe This is probably almost as light as carbon but cheaper to produce
george formby
27th January 2011, 13:03
i was reading somewhere where they had invented a new super metal but cant remember where
Graphine I believe. Lighter, stronger, more expensive etc.
avgas
27th January 2011, 13:30
Because it shakes like a mother fucker......
Have you seen CF disintegrate - usually caused by vibration.
Buyasta
27th January 2011, 13:30
Graphine I believe. Lighter, stronger, more expensive etc.
Graphene isn't a metal, it's a carbon structure - much along the lines of carbon nanotubes, but created as a one atom thick flat sheet, rather than a cylindrical structure as in nanotubes.
More to the point, Graphene is probably at least 5 years from seeing any commercial application - they're finding newer and cheaper ways to manufacture it, but it's still very new, so they've brought the price just to manufacture it down from about $1,000,000,000USD/cm^2 in 2008 to about $100USD/cm^2, but that's still pretty expensive, so you can imagine what a product incorporating it would retail for.
steve_xland
27th January 2011, 13:37
Well if anybody has the Bucks and wants to try it , my brother is a Carbon Fibre technician
Crasherfromwayback
27th January 2011, 13:37
Carbon fibre frames would probably be quite deep too, making it hard to get at the engine.
Rupe
27th January 2011, 17:13
CR250 is still talked about as being the worst handling bike ever,
Thats what I've heard too...a lot
B0000M
27th January 2011, 18:25
Thats what I've heard too...a lot
lol
yet at the time i thought my 99 125 was all good...
gwynfryn
27th January 2011, 19:19
The reason they use carbon fibre in push bikes is that they can build it up in places that you require rigidity such as the bottom bracket, then feather it it out in other places to provide shock absorption. Generally aluminium frames have been lighter and stiffer than cf but harsh. Thats why a common solution has been a aluminium frame with a cf fork. A quality steel frame is still desirable for its ride quality albeit at a slight weight disadvantage.
I wouldn't want a cf framed mx bike!
Jay GTI
28th January 2011, 12:16
What you all on about? KTM make a carbon-framed bike already...
http://motocrossactionmag.com/Uploads/Media/News/KTM%20scoreprestige_48_carbon_ora_2.jpg
thecharmed01
29th January 2011, 10:49
I'm not sure I'd ride a CF framed bike... I've seen what happened to a friends CF road bike after a crash and broken CF is NOT nice... it's sharp as buggery too!
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