My guess is that we will look back on the BB30 in a similar way as we do elevated chainstays. They are IMO an answer to a question that wasn't asked.
Way back in the day I raced a MTB and I at various times had different team bikes. One was a Fisher that had press in BB bearings and clip rings to locate the bearings laterally. It worked pretty well until you needed to service it and then the fun began. In the end that frame (a gorgeous fillet custom built by Eisentraut) ended up in the dumpster as so many press in BB frames did because all the pounding and grit stretched the BB shell out just a tad and then the bearings were allowed to knock around in there........ and once they start knocking the impacts made it worse and it was a downhill slide from there. Many years later I did a few big repairs on Fat Chances that had the BB shell compromised - the old ones had press in bearings and many suffred the same fate as my old team bike.
To me the press in headset and the screw in BB make wonderful sense. They allow for the bearing/frame interface to be replaced if needed. No need to toss a perfectly good frame. It's a wonderful design that will allow frames to have a very long life. I seriously doubt that we will see well used Trekandales 10 years from now that don't have serious bearing knock inside the BB shell. But that's OK I guess as I don't think many folks feel they need to last more than a few seasons anyway.
As so many have said before it seems to me that the BB30 was designed for the mass makers to have an easier and quicker way to build frames and assemble them. Nothing wrong with that in the slightest. But until there is compelling and solid reason to make the change I'll do what I do knowing that I won't get a distressed calls years down the road with a floppy BB.
As an aside - I had a customer in the queue (a very nice and reasonable man as far as I could tell) who walked away from his deposit because I wouldn't build him a frame around the BB30 standard. He was worried that even a year or two down the road he wouldn't be able to get parts or service on a threaded BB. He really thought that BB30 was a new standard. I tried to explain why the BB30 was an idea whose time IMO had not come but he was convinced by the market hype and I haven't heard from him since. Too bad really.
Humbly,
Dave
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