Quoting Mike.
This method of assessing a frame in isolation by anchoring it in a jig and then applying stress and loadings was adopted by most team and, as a result, the concensus was that aluminium was preferable when compared to carbon.This was not only as a result of the FIM raising weight limits. Admittedly,aluminium had the advantage of being cheaper, but it was also easier to produce a structure with the desired bending-twisting behaviour. Did we need the extra stiffness potential that carbon offered ? No. Carbon also has a reflex response range (in hertz) that you don't want motorcycle frame componentry to be in. In some carbon structures, like a yacht mast, you need that rapid reflex response, so when the wind powers the sail the mast rebounds quickly. When a motorcycle is on it's side going over bumps in a corner you don't need that sort of rapid reflex, we want the frame to unwind in a predictable way.
When you get a frame that has no feel,it may be a brilliant machine but they are only riding it (at) 95%.
Quoted for information only - and not to stop you going out and buying a copy. Please buy one....
My own thoughts on this are that slowing the reflex response works because it better matches the response of the human pilot. If we had synapses as fast as computers we may be able to live with very fast reacting frames...
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