Kinesis titanium frame, it was great while it lasted!

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OP
OP
AlanW

AlanW

Guru
Location
Not to sure?
I presume yours and other Ti bikes come with a carbon fork which will influence ride more than the frame, which in turn is influenced by the geometry.

Yes, you are correct in your assumption, and yes of course carbon forks will influence the ride quality. But to say that the carbon forks will influence the ride more than the frame is utter rubbish IMHO.
 
OP
OP
AlanW

AlanW

Guru
Location
Not to sure?
And end up like @AlanW ? no thanks.

How do you know you will end up like me, it just might be the best thing you've ever experienced, and it will last you a lifetime?

Just buy a titanium frame with a lifetime warranty and you have nothing to lose.

Despite recent events, it would not stop be buying another titanium frame, I would just be more selective on my choice.
 

Venod

Eh up
Location
Yorkshire
I presume yours and other Ti bikes come with a carbon fork which will influence ride more than the frame,

I think the introduction of the carbon fork revolutionised, the feel of bike riding, I can remember the first time I rode one very smooth compared to the steel I was used to, Ti can be built as a very stiff frame, but why would you do this when built correctly it gives a much superior ride to a steel frame with the same carbon fork, I have had six Ti (still have two) what's your experience of riding Ti ?
 

PaulSB

Legendary Member
And end up like @AlanW and others? no thanks.

But you could end up like anyone who had a frame failure be it ti, steel, aluminium, carbon. If ti frames were the only ones to fail you'd have a point.

I suggest the reality is there are no statistics to prove which, if there is one, is the best and safest frame material. If the OP was having the issue with another manufacturer and a carbon frame the conversation would be the same but about carbon and not titanium.
 

T4tomo

Legendary Member
Have you explored a repair @AlanW ? You obviously need a specialist welder with the right kit, but there are people out there doing Ti repairs, just a question of finding someone local-ish . Once welded properly it will be good and strong as new and likely to be the cheapest option for you.
 

FishFright

More wheels than sense
Just wondering if there isn't a bit of 'the king's new clothes ' in this?
I presume yours and other Ti bikes come with a carbon fork which will influence ride more than the frame, which in turn is influenced by the geometry. Surely the difference in ride will be in reality little different to a good steel bike?

I went to Ti frame from various steel frames and that ride quality no myth. Of course geometry is the deciding factor overall but there's something in Ti that damps non perfect road surfaces unlike nothing else.

Also fitted carbon forks to a few steel and aluminium framed bikes and its definitely not that which makes the difference.
 

Jameshow

Veteran
I went to Ti frame from various steel frames and that ride quality no myth. Of course geometry is the deciding factor overall but there's something in Ti that damps non perfect road surfaces unlike nothing else.

Also fitted carbon forks to a few steel and aluminium framed bikes and its definitely not that which makes the difference.

Also there will be good ti and bad....

A gas pipe ti frame with no butting won't ride anything like a double or triple butted frame.
But will probably be alot more robust!
 
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