by John G » Wed Aug 31, 2011 1:47 pm
[quote="Andrew G"]Vanishing post? The guys at HQ are the top dogs and I'm sure their repair would be as good as new if not better quality. The repair danger for me with carbon comes from crash damage where you may see a crack and get that fixed but not know if there was any other structural damage that you couldn't see, say an internal fracture, as carbon tends to shatter when it goes and metal normally bends or crumples so being less catastrophic could give you a bail out option.
Re a new frame I didn't get carbon as I don't like most frame designs and I was buying a "keeper" and wanted something that I knew could last, carbon may do but I'm personally not convinced by the test of time on the bonding etc. Probably nonsense but I'm also an old buffer and like a bike to be made of metal with some craftsmanship. Too many modern carbon frames are for me not good designs (seat tube has too steep geometry for everyday use, too race focused, fine if all you do is race on it) and are not road bikes but race bikes. The geometry only has to be fractionally slacker to make for a far more comfortable bike which 99% of people wouldn't know the difference on if they raced on it.
I got a titanium Burls from Justin ([url]http://www.burls.co.uk/tiRoad.php[/url]) where you get a completely custom build to your exact specifications (tube profiles, geometry, everything) for a lot less than the majority of mass produced carbon frames. The biggest issue with the vast majority of carbon frames is they are hideously over priced. burls frames are made in Russia by the same factory that made the Colnago titanium frames (titanium welding is rather specialised and tends to be better from the good old war factions so the US and Russia are rather good at it). It rides like a dream, handles excellently and is perfectly responsive when you push it in to a bend or accelerate out of one.
Cracking feedback Andrew! Thanks mate