With 195 KSI yield
strength,Columbus XCR stainless
steel tubing is twice as strong as 3/2.5 titanium, ideal for over
90kg rider.
Columbus XCr shares similar ride charachteristics to the Spirit
frame with a little more strength and a little more stiffness.
XcR is completley corrosion resistant and will outlast any other
bike while still remaining a pleasure to ride every single
time.

Silver fillet braze $2400 ( 1750g medium frame
)
Polished without
fork
COLUMBUS XCR
In cooperation with Trafiltubi ed Aubert & Duval, the new
Columbus seamless tube set in stainless steel named XCr, is
created. Starting form a specific request of the military industry,
looking for a valid substitute for cadmium plated temper hardening
steels which could no longer be produced because of their highly
polluting manufacturing process, a new martensitic stainless steel
with high content of Chromium and Molybdenum and Nickel as alloy
elements which increase the mechanical and weldability
characteristics, was created. The martensitic main structure
contains traces of austenite that reduces the possibility of crack
formation especially during the welding process.
The great weldability properties of the new XCr stainless steel,
together with its high fatigue resistance and its extraordinary
geometrical stability at high temperatures, make this material the
natural element for welded structures, such as bicycle frames.
Thanks to the high stiffness/weight and UTS/weight ratios (better
than titanium and aluminium alloys) together with the elevated
characteristics of corrosion resistance, it is possible to
manufacture triple butted tubes to build extremely light and
indestructible frames.
KVA Stainless
Twice as strong as 3/2.5
titanium !
Silver fillet braze $2000
"Changing the Game with New Stainless Steel Tubing for
Bikes"
"Steel, Aluminum, Titanium, Carbon, or Stainless Steel Tubing
for Your Bicycle Frame?"
MS2™ stainless steel tubing is Precision Made in U.S.A. for
high-performance bicycle frame applications.
Already proven by KVA STAINLESS™ in other industries, patented
martensitic stainless (MS2™)structural tubing can now be integrated
into high performance bicycle frames and forks to reduce weight,
increase strength and stiffness.
MS2™ offers excellent properties, including specific strength
and stiffness, toughness and fatigue performance, in addition to
corrosion-resistance.

Reinvent Vintage... Think Modern"™
MS²™ is an air-hardenable, martensitic stainless steel with amazing
tensile strength > 200 ksi (1400 Mpa) which means it's twice as
strong as titanium with a frame weight comparable to high-end
aluminum.
MS2™ stainless steel bike tubing exhibits:
tensile strength > 200 ksi (1400 MPa)
elongation > 14%
hardness ~ 38-42 HRC
Ideal applications include silver brazed lugged-construction,
silver fillet, and TIG welded bicycle frames. ER309L filler wire
and 350° F stress-relieve recommended for best welded joint
performance.

Cyclists Care About Weight, the Feel of the Ride, Strength,
Safety, and Price
Weight has been hyped in the media to the point that
manufacturers are creating frames that are just one bad bump away
from disaster. If you have not seen the results of failed forks and
handlebars, try Googling "broken fork." It's not a pretty picture.
The number of failures in high-end forks and frames is astounding,
all because manufacturers feel pressure to defy the laws of physics
with lighter and lighter forks and frames.
Safety is defined not just by the durability of a part, but also
by the warnings the rider receives before component failure. A part
that bends before it breaks is safer than one that snaps suddenly.
Material strength equals safety, but what kind of strength?
Strength is measured in several ways, and it pays to consider
all of them:
Impact Strength denotes how much concussive energy a component
can absorb in a single blow without failing. Impact strength can be
tested in a laboratory, but as a practical matter in cycling it is
irrelevant. That's because a severe impact will dislodge a rider
long before it threatens the integrity of a frame or fork. Once the
rider is down, the state of the part is meaningless.
Fatigue Strength is a measure of how well a material withstands
repeated stress cycles. Fatigue strength is critical for a bicycle,
since the rider constantly flexes a frame by pushing the pedals and
pulling on the handlebars. Aluminum has the least fatigue strength
among popular frame building materials. Steel, and Stainless Steel,
by contrast, has the best... even exceeding that of titanium
alloys. It can flex an infinite number of times below its
"endurance limit" - a stress threshold for which no amount of
cyclic loading will cause failure. This stress level is never
approached simply by cycling on a properly designed and built steel
(and stainless steel) frame.
Material (Fracture) Toughness is the feature of a material that
describes its ability to prevent a nick from turning into a crack,
and a crack from turning into a break. Toughness is another area
where steel and Stainless Steel far outperforms aluminum, carbon
fiber, and titanium. Think about it: When was the last time you saw
carbon fiber nails, or aluminum rebar? Never.
Ultimate Tensile Strength (UTS) is a widely cited measurement of
material strength. UTS is measured by pulling apart a test coupon
made with material of a specific thickness and length. The UTS of
tubing is not insignificant, but it is vastly overrated as a
measurement of the strength. Bicycle frames are not torn in half,
nor do they fail because of uniaxial tension. Other factors, such
as fatigue, cracking, and impact will cause a frame to fail long
before UTS becomes a factor. Glass has extremely high UTS because
it is difficult to pull apart, but a glass bicycle would not last
long on a mountain trail or even a street. All the materials used
in traditional bicycle tubing have sufficient UTS to be safe.
The feature most critical to rider safety is its mode of
failure. That is, how long the material will support the rider
after its integrity has been breached by a crack, a hole, a dent,
or even a deep scratch. A rapid–even instantaneous–failure is known
as a catastrophic failure. Catastrophic failure leads to
injury.
Of the most common materials used in bike frames today, carbon
fiber has the highest rate of catastrophic failure. Steel and
Stainless Steel has the lowest rate of catastrophic failure. When
steel fails, it fails slowly. In a sport where speed is the name of
the game, failure is the one area where it's good to be slow. Real
slow.
Metals respond to force by bending, denting, and even stretching
(elongation), not by snapping and shattering. The slow rate of
failure provides time for the rider to pick up warning signals,
feeling something is wrong prior to the failure of a component,
preventing injury.
Of secondary importance, but worth considering, is
repairability. The old auto body shop adage is "metal has memory."
Steel can be repaired more completely and more easily than other
materials can.
Comparing frame materials that are new is one thing, but what
about frame materials that have aged? Different materials age in
different ways. Environmental factors such as temperature,
humidity, air salinity, ozone, and ultraviolet radiation all affect
framing material. Life is a laboratory that is constantly
fizzing.
In the harsh world of chemical change, metals outlast plastics
and carbon fiber. A weak point of carbon fiber is in the resins
that hold the carbon fiber layers together. These resins are prone
to degradation when exposed to ultraviolet light from the sun.
However, metals are not exempt from environmental degradation.
Typical bicycle tube set aluminum alloys, for example, "age"
naturally to higher strengths over an extended period of time.
While a stronger tube may appear better, the microstructural change
robs the material of its ductility and can cause premature brittle
failure – especially around welded joints.
The phrase "environmental degradation" often evokes images of
metallic corrosion–rusted wheel wells, corroded hinges, and leaky
watering cans. Rust (a term reserved for the corrosion byproduct of
steel reacting with oxygen) actually builds up a protective layer
that protects the underlying steel against further environmental
damage. That is why it is not uncommon in some parts of the world
to see 20-, 30-, even 40-year-old rust-covered steel-framed bikes
still in use. Of course, the thicker the steel, the less vulnerable
it is to failure due to corrosion. Super-thin, 0.35mm steel tube
frames are more vulnerable to damage from rust than thicker-walled
tubes are. However, diligent care with anti-rust, protective film
sprays such as FrameSaver, Boesheild T9, and LPS can prevent
corrosion. If you prefer old-school solutions, try coating the
steel frame with linseed oil or automotive waxes. Alternatively,
Stainless Steel tubing offers corrosion resistance as well as high
strength. A "passive layer" of adherent chromium oxide forms to
protect stainless steel from further environmental degradation.
Under most conditions, this protective layer is self healing – if
scratched new chromium oxide layer will form nearly
instantaneously.
Another important, but rarely discussed, aspect of frame
material is defect tolerance. No one wants to admit that materials
have defects, but they do. It is impossible to manufacture
quantities of anything without occasional defects. Even in the
white-coated, "dust-free" environments, defects creep into
materials. That's why everyone from rocket engineers to computer
chip manufacturers build defect tolerance and safety factors into
their designs. Bicycle manufacturers should, too. The important
thing to know is how an unseen defect will affect the strength and
integrity of the material. A material that is more defect-tolerant
is less likely to fail. Steel and Stainless Steel are materials
that are highly defect-tolerant, due to their high toughness and
durability. Carbon fiber is the least defect-tolerant of all
materials used in the making of bicycle frames.
Shock absorption is another material quality that makes for a
safer and smoother ride. The physics of shock absorption are as old
as Newton's laws of motion: Every action causes and equal and
opposite reaction. A shock is absorbed by motion–compression,
deflection, or both, and dissipated within the material. Something
has to give.
The idea that a shock can be absorbed without motion is a myth.
One marketing claim is that carbon fiber forks absorb shocks well,
creating a smoother, more comfortable ride. It sounds promising,
but it conflicts with basic physics. Carbon fiber is very stiff, so
there is relatively little movement to absorb the shock. Metal
absorbs some shock through compression and deflection, but only
suspension forks truly absorb shocks, because they move. Otherwise,
the best way to create a smoother ride is to deflate your tires and
lighten up on your grip.
Vibration damping is a phrase heard a lot in the cycling world,
but its importance is exaggerated. The term refers to a material's
tendency to absorb and dissipate vibrations after some force causes
it to start vibrating. Wind chimes produce sustained vibration,
pleasing their owners but often annoying the neighbors. Vibration
is the result of high-frequency flex or applied loads. The flex of
a component is influenced by the material it is made with, its
size, and its shape.
The entire discussion of vibration damping is somewhat academic
when it comes to cycling, however, since bicycle parts are not
suspended in the air like a tuning fork. A bicycle is composed of
multiple components, including the frame, the fork, rubber tires.
Most importantly, a bicycle is in contact with the ground and it
supports a rider whose body absorbs vibrations of the frame. Having
said this, the bulk material properties can be used to generalize
the "feel" of a frame and its tendency to damp vibrations. Carbon
fiber, being very stiff (with a high elastic modulus) is considered
by many to be harsh, transmitting every bump and ripple directly to
the rider – causing fatigue and discomfort after long rides.
Aluminum, magnesium and even titanium have been described as "soft
and mushy", with their lower elastic modulus and stiffness. Riders
enjoy the feel of steel and stainless steel – the resiliency and
liveliness of the material is without comparison.
Physical comfort on a bicycle is influenced by several factors,
of which frame materials is the least important. The height of the
handlebars, the distance from the seat to the pedals, and the air
pressure in the tires all contribute more to a comfortable ride
than the frame materials do. Raise the handlebars, move the seat
back, and decrease tire pressure for greater comfort. Remember to
relax your body and lighten your grip, too.
Comfort is as much psychological as it is physical. A bike may
fit your body perfectly, but if your mind is unsettled about it, it
won't feel right. For example, a woman who grew up with an open
"girls" frame might not ever feel comfortable on a standard diamond
style frame. Similarly, hardcore racers who curled their 6-foot
bodies around a 56cm frame might never get used to a 62cm frame,
even if it is a better fit for their size. The same goes for frame
materials. Steel affords the maximum strength and safety, but some
people resist it on psychological grounds, mainly because of
perceived weight penalties.
Consider this: The weight of the bicycle frame makes up only ¼
of the overall weight of a bicycle, and the bicycle is only 1/10 of
the overall weight with a rider in place. In other words, frame
weight is only 1/40 or 2.5 percent of the overall weight. So
shaving a pound off the frame weight will change your overall
weight by less than one percent. You can double that weight change
simply by losing two pounds of body weight.
Many people believe engineering is more important than
materials, but that is not entirely true. The differences in
material–especially failure modes–can increase safety and reduce
injuries. Steel and stainless steel frames may sound out of date,
but for strength, safety, repairability, durability, and aesthetic
beauty, nothing beats steel or Stainless Steel. Enjoy the Feel of
SteelTM
| Product Code |
Description |
Attributes |
Price |
|
| champione953xcr |
Twice as strong as Titanium, Columbus XCR or KVA tubing |
|
$2,000.00
|
|
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