Lol u r dumbI personally would buy an Iron Horse Yakuza Kumicho frame for $200-300, waaaaaaaaaaaay before a retardly expensive, "bespoke" version of the same thing form GG or FTW.
Lol u r dumbI personally would buy an Iron Horse Yakuza Kumicho frame for $200-300, waaaaaaaaaaaay before a retardly expensive, "bespoke" version of the same thing form GG or FTW.
can't speak to the GG, but frank's frames are most certainly heat treated.Correct me if I'm wrong, but neither the GG or FTW is heat treated is it?
Do you have any evidence of that? I see none on his site?
As far as I can tell, he has mostly switched to cro-mo, because it doesn't require heat treat.
All his old Yeti/Homegrown/Spooky stuff was 7005, where it was acceptable in those days to have no post weld. 15 years makes a difference.
Can you build a non-heat treated aluminum bike that works? Yes. Is a modern heat treated bike going to be more durable, lighter, stronger? Yes.
There is no way I would buy a heavier, weaker product, for more money, just cause it's made in the states. That's just me.
Listen, you kashima coated internet troll, there's a big difference between frames aside from suspension design and factory. I know that's hard to believe, but alloy, structural design, shock size, shock hardware, headtube design, bearing size, geometry...and more, actually play a part in how a frame rides and wears. If you don't believe me, I'll send you my yakuza that's sitting on my basement floor. It has no less than five cracks in it. On on each side of the swing arm shock mount, one on each side of the seatpost tower, and another one behind the headtube. If you have seen any of those bikes recently, you would have seen a crack at the rear shock mount, and there's a good chance you'd see at least one at the seat tower. Almost every yakuza I've seen in a parking lot shows at least one of those cracks. You know why? They were designed poorly. I wish that I had spent the money I wasted on the yakuza on a real frame.Says the buddy that is constantly hemmoraging money into CL piles with no resale... Do you actually ride bikes, or just talk about them on the internet?
Please explain to me how the FTW or GG is a better designed or manufactured bike than the Iron Horse. Other than some guy who lives in the United States welded it.
Yakuza was the budget option, to the Sunday. Manufactured in same factory (except WC models) and designed by same designer that gives you all e-boners. Taiwanese Sundays are pretty much most durable DH bike evar. I've never seen a broken Yakuza, and know of several that get ridden hard. Most, however, have lived in the garage, collecting dust.
I heard he heat treats his frames by sticking them up your tight ass.Do you have any evidence of that? I see none on his site?
As far as I can tell, he has mostly switched to cro-mo, because it doesn't require heat treat.
All his old Yeti/Homegrown/Spooky stuff was 7005, where it was acceptable in those days to have no post weld. 15 years makes a difference.
Can you build a non-heat treated aluminum bike that works? Yes. Is a modern heat treated bike going to be more durable, lighter, stronger? Yes.
There is no way I would buy a heavier, weaker product, for more money, just cause it's made in the states. That's just me.
Material and weld quality. He uses better aluminum, no question about that. I don't think I need to defend his welding skills.Please explain to me how the FTW or GG is a better designed or manufactured bike than the Iron Horse.
S
I am very familiar with FTW, Yeti, Homegrowns, Spooky, T1, etc. That was a different time: pre-heat treat days. Heat treating is a lot more complicated than most people know, and you don't pull it off in a garage.
Totally agree. One of those big brands just needs to come up with a GG/FTW/whatever single pivot design copy and make it cheap. There's no reason they can't make a quality frame for way cheaper than a boutique brand.I think Santa Cruz is totally missing the ball, not offering an updated Super 8, simple single pivot with good geo, for $1500 or so. I guess the industry has decided, DH frames start at $2000+.
L....O.....L.... I don't see specialized heat treat process or aluminum alloys listed on their site either. They must be secretly switching to steel!Do you have any evidence of that? I see none on his site?
Good lord...Correct me if I'm wrong, but neither the GG or FTW is heat treated is it?
Last I checked (and on this particular manufacturer my checking is better than your checking) the ones they've been making for the last 2 years or so haven't seen a single one fail. That first run with the headtubes was it.Turner hasn't made a truly "durable" DH frame since their square tube DHR's.
I have no insider knowledge, but was going to say that after that first batch, I have not heard of one failing. Anecdotal evidence to be sure, but there aren't too many bikes in widespread use that that can be said for.Last I checked (and on this particular manufacturer my checking is better than your checking) the ones they've been making for the last 2 years or so haven't seen a single one fail. That first run with the headtubes was it.
I've seen a bunch of them failing in the front triangles. Which surprised me actually. I would have pegged the rear triangle to get ripped apart on that thing.Last I checked (and on this particular manufacturer my checking is better than your checking) the ones they've been making for the last 2 years or so haven't seen a single one fail. That first run with the headtubes was it.
And just a reminder, a run of the 05 square tubers all cracked at the shock mounts. Not the ones before and not the ones after but not all of those were the same.
Those new bikes are bomber as shlt.
Headtube right?I've seen a bunch of them failing in the front triangles.
A couple headtubes (top and bottom, separately), BB/cage area, and seattube/toptube joint. Pretty new ones, as far as I know.Headtube right?
Those aren't recent runs.
Tons in SoCal, brah.Note to all dhr owners: don't hang out with hacktastic
dhr poison!
I didn't even think there were that many out there.
anyway: if you really want off the radar, those GG frames look pretty damn cool
I still want to ride one.
You are wrong with regards to GG frames.Correct me if I'm wrong, but neither the GG or FTW is heat treated is it?
You're thinking of KarpielI thought aluminum was virtually un-rideable without being heat treated?
Anyway, my vote is the GG DH, especially with that lengthy large around the corner- sounds like it meets your requirements quite well, assuming its long enough.
no he won't, i tried :/Speaking of rare and US made... if you throw enough money at him, I'm sure doc would make you a silencer
You must not have offered enough money. Everything has a price. But i figure the amount it would take is somewhere in the absurd range.no he won't, i tried :/