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Drilling Random Places!


Ashley-Wood

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Random hilarity

You also missed out being able to talk about it at rides and stuff, as well as it being different to everyone elses :P

well u must have been running pretty heavy tyres. Theres nothing wrong with uprating the components on ur bike, but this thread is about cutting holes in things and invalidationg your warrenty (and ultimately putting your health at risk) to make 2mm height difference and so on. People haven't been doing it for that long, so im waiting for the time when fatigued components break due to pointless holes have been cut in them. People are always going to copy the Pros, but they change their components every month! I just dont get some people...!

I drilled my bike and got the grinder on it the other day. It was a laugh, my bike is lighter even if only marginally, it looks more interesting and the warranty was well out anyway. If your going to wait for components to die from fatigue due to holes you might as well look at all the threads about components without holes that also die while your waiting. Everything breaks eventually, if someone else has bought it, why shouldn't they? If it makes it just that fraction lighter and that's all you need to perform better on a ride then why not? Obviously cutting out large sections of down tubes and stuff is a bit silly, but theres nothing wrong with a random hole here and there.

But yeah, heres my contribution, just a headtube and support braces so far, hedgehog logo is going to go too, gotta neaten the braces up as its currently just an angle grinder hole and then sort out the forks and dropouts.

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Tyres can be silly heavy - a dual ply wide 26" tyre with wire bead at around 1200g is substantially weightier than a single ply thin tyre with a kevlar bead at nearer 600g

The warranty on trials parts is rarely amazing, and generally after a year or so you won't have one anyway

Removing a sensible amount of material from a headtube or similar is unlikely to be putting your health at risk any more than looking out of the window on a gloomy day only to see the other girls eating ice cream with the badgers

Making a bike lighter isn't necessarily about getting an extra inch on your sidehops or anything like that, but it can make it easier to ride, or mean you can ride longer without getting tired which means you can ride more often/for longer

People have been modifying bikes in loads of different ways for ages, but it's just becoming more common more recently and some people are doing it without actually thinking, removing material that might be needed, or in a way that generates stress risers in critical locations

If it's not your bag, then don't do it baby

LMAO! you've got too much time on ur hands!

fair enough, i take your point. You'll just have to wait until u see my new bike when it comes :P

Andrew

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I'd never actually drill any of my parts. Well, I've got no plans to at the moment. But after feeling how light my ciguena is with an atomlab rim on the back, it makes me wonder how light it would be with one of the V!Z 24" rims.

In orange, of course :P

I think if I were ever to drill anything, it would be parts that are very solid, such as the bashring.

Edited by Revolver
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As a random question, why don't tyre manufacturers produce lighter downhill style tyres (eg Maxxis Minion) with a kevlar bead instead of steel?

Surely they'd just lay in a kevlar bead instead of steel, wouldn't really need any extra tooling. Might knock 100g or so off per tyre?

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As a random question, why don't tyre manufacturers produce lighter downhill style tyres (eg Maxxis Minion) with a kevlar bead instead of steel?

Surely they'd just lay in a kevlar bead instead of steel, wouldn't really need any extra tooling. Might knock 100g or so off per tyre?

They would be the same as folding tyres, so for trials, there's the risk that they pop off the rim

Edited by Revolver
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As a random question, why don't tyre manufacturers produce lighter downhill style tyres (eg Maxxis Minion) with a kevlar bead instead of steel?

Surely they'd just lay in a kevlar bead instead of steel, wouldn't really need any extra tooling. Might knock 100g or so off per tyre?

If your gonna use it for trials yer good idea, if your gonna use it for downhill you would die, the strain on the bead would be to high it's just pop out of the rim and death to you my deer friend.

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If your gonna use it for trials yer good idea, if your gonna use it for downhill you would die, the strain on the bead would be to high it's just pop out of the rim and death to you my deer friend.

I ain't no deer son.

Well this is a trials website and I was infact insinuating it would be for trials use, yes.

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A lot of the reason DH tyres are made with a steel bead is that they're less likely to come off the rim when they do puncture, so you have a better chance of finishing the DH run. Revlar is stronger in tension than steel, so strength is not the issue.

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