All you have to do is buy another 20 and you'll have only spent an extra 40 quid a frame. Much more palatable.In Reverse wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 3:16 pm Glad I haven't just paid £1800 for one about 6 weeks ago![]()

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All you have to do is buy another 20 and you'll have only spent an extra 40 quid a frame. Much more palatable.In Reverse wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 3:16 pm Glad I haven't just paid £1800 for one about 6 weeks ago![]()
Because there wasn't a problem with threaded BBs, so it's a pointless standard, totally deserving of bashing. Perfectly fine isn't perfectly good. So why bother?stevenshand wrote: ↑Sat Jan 30, 2021 4:54 pm Except Pressfit isn't proven junk. There are some awful implementations of it but done properly, PF is a perfectly fine standard. Bashing brands that can manufacture correctly is fine, but bashing the standard makes no sense.
I'm not sure what you're saying here. If you're saying it's easier for a Chinese factory to make a PF BB than a threaded one then I'm not sure that's correct. In fact I know it's not. All the poor implementations backup the fact that it's harder. And as far as tolerances go, the tolerances for a PF are tighter than they are for a BSA threaded shell.mountainbaker wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 8:46 pmBecause it's easier to get a Chinese factory to produce things with less critical tolerances.stevenshand wrote: ↑Sat Jan 30, 2021 4:54 pm Except Pressfit isn't proven junk. There are some awful implementations of it but done properly, PF is a perfectly fine standard. Bashing brands that can manufacture correctly is fine, but bashing the standard makes no sense.
Well, firstly we've never had any Chinese frames. We have had some carbon frames from Taiwan that we painted and we currently have a steel frame from Taiwan that comes to us already painted. About 90% of the handbuilt steel frames we make here in the UK have PF shells, the CF Taiwanese had a mix (same frame but the BSA threaded version had a bonded-in aluminium threaded insert which was awful). The current imported steel frame has a BSA threaded because it's cheaper and we're trying to hit a price point.mountainbaker wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 8:46 pm Do you put pf on your hand built frames, or only the ones from China that you paint? If so, why?
They're built here: http://www.titancycles.com/
Steven, that's the first argument I've heard in favour of PF that makes sense from an engineering perspective rather than the marketing BS ("It's stiffer", etc.) that's normally trotted out.stevenshand wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 9:28 pm The issue with the threaded standard (which I have nothing against) is that it's not as well suited to modern materials (CF, thin wall large diameter steel and aluminium). If we were all still riding around on skinny steel tubes I'd be on your side.
Do one. That’s not helping
Sure , but remember, it's not really the frame/bike makers telling you that PF is 'stiffer etc', it's component companies that are telling you 30mm crank spindles are stiffer than 24mm spindles and you can't (really) get a 30mm spindle into a BSA threaded bottom bracket and play nice.whitestone wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 8:26 amSteven, that's the first argument I've heard in favour of PF that makes sense from an engineering perspective rather than the marketing BS ("It's stiffer", etc.) that's normally trotted out.stevenshand wrote: ↑Sun Jan 31, 2021 9:28 pm The issue with the threaded standard (which I have nothing against) is that it's not as well suited to modern materials (CF, thin wall large diameter steel and aluminium). If we were all still riding around on skinny steel tubes I'd be on your side.
It's not really about the wall thickness of the BB shell. Cy won't have specced a thicker wall BB, it'll be about 38mm OD, the same as most BB shells. The issue is the surface area of the welded region. When we were all riding bikes with 32mm down tubes, they mated up fine with a 38mm BB shell. As materials got better (stronger), walls got thinner which meant tubes needed to go bigger diameter to be stiff enough. So now you have a 38mm DT (or bigger) mating to a 38mm BB shell. This isn't necessarily bad but you also need to get 2 chainstays and a seattube on there too which means there's bigger compound mitres (where two tubes intersect each other as well as the tube they're joining, in this case the BB shell). A PF30 BB shell is close to 50mm OD which gives much more room.whitestone wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 8:26 am But ...
How much extra weight/cost is a suitably thick walled steel or aluminium tube over a thin walled one when it comes to the BB? I've a Cotic Solaris Mk1, thin walled steel and it's got a threaded BB and it's been no problem so presumably Cy has specced a thicker tube for the BB. Similarly I've a Spesh Roubaix (SL2 from memory) that's ten years old, CF frame but with a threaded BB shell. I replaced one of the bearings last year after 24k km. N=1 (or 2) and all that but it can be done.
This one i dont get push hard on your cranks and the wheels and chain stays deflect - who out there was moaning about how flexy their cranks were ? Its the least flexy part of the systems even your chain ring will deflect more - assuming you have vaguely exciting levels of power] Had anyone ever complained about this ?it's component companies that are telling you 30mm crank spindles are stiffer than 24mm spindles
their customers being the bike manufacturers rather than the paying public- again I dont recall anyone wishing bottom brackets were fitted like headsetsThe factories are only making what their customers are asking for
Assuming you mean T47, what are the issues trying to fit a crank? The only difference between the T47 and the PF30 is that one is threaded, the actual ID of the bearings and the width should be the same so I'd be interested to hear what the issue is.In Reverse wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 12:36 pm Worth pointing out that his newer frames have a N47 BB shell, and trying to get one of those to fit an mtb crank is "interesting" at the moment. I'm pretty sure I managed to buy the only one in the country to fit SRAM DUB, and that took a few days to find.
Apologies Steven that wasn't very clear (including the actual namestevenshand wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 1:11 pmAssuming you mean T47, what are the issues trying to fit a crank? The only difference between the T47 and the PF30 is that one is threaded, the actual ID of the bearings and the width should be the same so I'd be interested to hear what the issue is.In Reverse wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 12:36 pm Worth pointing out that his newer frames have a N47 BB shell, and trying to get one of those to fit an mtb crank is "interesting" at the moment. I'm pretty sure I managed to buy the only one in the country to fit SRAM DUB, and that took a few days to find.
I see. It was the BB you were struggling to get, not the crank. That makes more sense. The Rideworks parts are great. He makes his own seals for the bearings too.In Reverse wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 3:36 pmApologies Steven that wasn't very clear (including the actual namestevenshand wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 1:11 pmAssuming you mean T47, what are the issues trying to fit a crank? The only difference between the T47 and the PF30 is that one is threaded, the actual ID of the bearings and the width should be the same so I'd be interested to hear what the issue is.In Reverse wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 12:36 pm Worth pointing out that his newer frames have a N47 BB shell, and trying to get one of those to fit an mtb crank is "interesting" at the moment. I'm pretty sure I managed to buy the only one in the country to fit SRAM DUB, and that took a few days to find.). It's the buying bit, not the fitting. Supplies seemed to be very thin on the ground a few weeks ago, genuinely thought I wasn't going to be able to get one.
Ended up buying direct from a UK manufacturer (Rideworks) and they had just one left in stock.
I agree with this. Factories make what they are told to make by bike designers. Who make decisions on both merit of design and the bottom line, cost. All designers have different bias toward quality and function/cost of course.
I'm genuinely interested in this outlook and where it comes from. From a small volume builder perspective, I'm pretty sure the material cost is higher with a PF frame, I know I was paying more for either raw tubing to make the BB shell or in fact if I was buying finished to size (and threaded) shells, PF was more expensive. The post manufacturing machining/reaming/chasing is certainly more expensive in terms of tooling and time to deal with PF frames than it is with threaded.
OK, you're a very, very, very nice man.
...way of maxing out my credit cardI was trying to make a genuinely nice
No clearing minePiemonster wrote: ↑Mon Feb 01, 2021 8:29 pm...way of maxing out my credit cardI was trying to make a genuinely nice![]()
I'm sure it's not your first time here, what did you expect? We made it from sewing projects to Toyah's tee shirt on another thread in 4 pages