With only the two bolts holding it in place wouldnt the aluminum be a better choice? ie stronger? Easier to bend back if it got bent? Lighter?
Two bolts is plenty strong...BMX has been doing this for years. My Profile Porkchop is still serving me strong ofter 3 years of sproket stalls with a 230# guy on top.Well the poly ones won't bend, and are stronger to begin with to those types of forces. As for weight, not sure. From what i understand, to get the same strength in aluminum, it'd weigh more. 2 bolts vs 4 isn't going to make a difference.
It actually may be better now that I think of it for the gaurd to bend instead of send all the shock into 2 bolts, potentially snapping them off? Not sure, I'm sure DW can correct me if I'm wrong.
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The taco mounts to the back of an SRS backplate. Bolt pattern doesn't matter. The backplate only comes in one pattern. It is NOT like an srs bashplate for grinds which you are both confusing it for.
Hope that helps.
I don't know where you came up with your information, but I am sure that a lot of riders will disagree that polycarbonate tends to "crack". Only a couple things can cause a crack. 1) the material itself is defective/ wet when injected, 2) it was exposed to some sort of chenical that attacks it, which are few and far between. 3) someone overtightens a fastener to a ridiculous point, causing failure of the material. There are people out there with superchargers that have literally been riding them for years.polycarbonate doesn't tend to bend, just crack. strength is a very broad catergory that can deal with many aspects and to call a pc basher "stronger" is not always accurate. i like aluminum, it is pretty
the weight is 68 grams and bolts to the lg1. note- this is not for sale at this time. it is still in the design phase. any feedback is appreciated.
nathan
The exact weight of the a 36T e.thirteen taco made from a 36T supercharger is 72 grams without hardware, and is almost completely indestructable.I will say this - the Gold Tooth Taco is WAY lighter than what you could fashion with a Tuff Max e.thirteen Taco.
I weighed my new 36T e.thirteen SRS bash guard on a digi scale (no hardware) and it came in at 201.28g
So you figure you'll be using approx. 1/2 of a bash guard to make a Taco - if you check out the Gold Tooth Taco on Sicklines.com, it's listed weight is 68g.
So that's 100.64 for an e.thirteen Taco vs. 68g. for the Gold Tooth.
Not bad.
As far as failure goes, I'd imagine that you'd want the Taco to bend/give first, then the boomerang to deform, then the boomerang bolts to shear before you'd finally want the ISCG tabs to bend/shear.
Now there's an informative answer. I can't wait to see themI don't know where you came up with your information, but I am sure that a lot of riders will disagree that polycarbonate tends to "crack". Only a couple things can cause a crack. 1) the material itself is defective/ wet when injected, 2) it was exposed to some sort of chenical that attacks it, which are few and far between. 3) someone overtightens a fastener to a ridiculous point, causing failure of the material. There are people out there with superchargers that have literally been riding them for years.
Dave
I was gonna say, in all the years that I have run an SRS (an awful long time now), I have never managed to crack one, and I give it plenty of abuse slamming it into things I should be avoiding. I have of course, bent MANY mrp plates into pretzels ending race runs and ruining weekends (as well as destroying chains and chainrings).I don't know where you came up with your information, but I am sure that a lot of riders will disagree that polycarbonate tends to "crack". Only a couple things can cause a crack. 1) the material itself is defective/ wet when injected, 2) it was exposed to some sort of chenical that attacks it, which are few and far between. 3) someone overtightens a fastener to a ridiculous point, causing failure of the material. There are people out there with superchargers that have literally been riding them for years.
Keep in mind that the LG1's bolt on bashguard design is pending patent in the USA, Canada, Taiwan, China, OZ/Nz and all of Europe. Sell at your own risk.
Dave
The exact weight of the a 36T e.thirteen taco made from a 36T supercharger is 72 grams without hardware, and is almost completely indestructable.
We have tested for over a year now and have not yet seen one case of the ISCG tabs bending or shearing. We have an even newer bashguard design that is pending patent and will weigh in the range of 30-40 grams with the same level of protection as the current supercharger taco.
Lots of patent $$$ lately, and this is the reason why we hesitated to offer the taco for sale until this winter.
Dave
Dave, I was not implying that the E.13 supercharger would crack. It was in reference to the statement of "strength" I have not seen any of our aluminum bashers bend or fail in anyway let alone enough to end a race.I don't know where you came up with your information, but I am sure that a lot of riders will disagree that polycarbonate tends to "crack". Only a couple things can cause a crack. 1) the material itself is defective/ wet when injected, 2) it was exposed to some sort of chenical that attacks it, which are few and far between. 3) someone overtightens a fastener to a ridiculous point, causing failure of the material. There are people out there with superchargers that have literally been riding them for years.
Keep in mind that the LG1's bolt on bashguard design is pending patent in the USA, Canada, Taiwan, China, OZ/Nz and all of Europe. Sell at your own risk.
Dave
Its all good. Honestly, e.thirteen exists because of this issue. If I didnt personally drop chains and lose races because of bending or poorly made old guides, I never would have had the need to start thinking about new and different. Based on the fact that pretty much every drivetrain component company in the bike industry has followed e.thirteen's lead and gone to a polycarbonate bshguard (despite its increased cost) I think I may not have been the only one who saw this issue.I have not seen any of our aluminum bashers bend or fail in anyway let alone enough to end a race.
I was gonna say, in all the years of abuse slamming things I should be avoiding into pretzels like race face I can do without a taco with FLAMES!