lxs602
Regular
I inherited the bike below. I now found out it has done ~25,000 miles.
https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/m...g-this-out-worth-keeping.302615/#post-7404815
Leonard Zinn recommends replacing the handlebars, fork and stem every 25000 miles in his book on bike maintenance, saying something on the lines of, "all handlebars will break due to fatigue, but the trick is not to be riding when they do" (I haven´t the book to hand, but I will correct this quote soon).
It is an aluminium bike, and I am aware that fatigue will vary with material, build design, quality of welding, etc., as discussed in this article on Sheldon Brown´s website. (It is an article on frames however, rather than on handlebars, forks and stems).
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/rinard/frame_fatigue_test.htm
The bike probably wouldn´t be worth keeping if these needed replacing, and I wouldn´t want to give someone a frame that might suddenly break.
What do you think?
https://www.cyclechat.net/threads/m...g-this-out-worth-keeping.302615/#post-7404815
Leonard Zinn recommends replacing the handlebars, fork and stem every 25000 miles in his book on bike maintenance, saying something on the lines of, "all handlebars will break due to fatigue, but the trick is not to be riding when they do" (I haven´t the book to hand, but I will correct this quote soon).
It is an aluminium bike, and I am aware that fatigue will vary with material, build design, quality of welding, etc., as discussed in this article on Sheldon Brown´s website. (It is an article on frames however, rather than on handlebars, forks and stems).
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/rinard/frame_fatigue_test.htm
The bike probably wouldn´t be worth keeping if these needed replacing, and I wouldn´t want to give someone a frame that might suddenly break.
What do you think?