Dear Guest,
Please register or login. Content don't create itself!
Thank you
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
Unfortunately toxicity and performance seem to go hand in hand with PU.
Mark Kelly
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
Originally Posted by
armyofevilrobots
I'll take a look at that epoxy you recommend though... We're using some furniture specific stuff, but it's open time is only 30 minutes, and it's also VERY sensitive to temperature (22C +- 3 degrees ambient, or it hazes like crazy).
That sounds like it might be amine blush.
Thinking about it, the one I mentioned is probably not ideal for your process, it's a special purpose low viscosity / high crosslinking laminating resin and it sets really slowly unless you get it to 80 degrees C or so, which promotes crosslinking rather than chain extension. It does retain good clarity and doesn't blush at all but it's also slightly yellow. It's also very expensive.
Have you looked at the specialist epoxies they use for casting museum specimens? They are formulated to prioritise optical clarity so they might work well for you.
Mark Kelly
-
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
I'll be patient and just wait to see how you do it, but i'll be fascinated to see how you deal with the joins, as I know there isn't an inch of exposed carbon in the finished product.
Mind you, the whole thing has been fascinating. Thanks for posting the process.
Colin Mclelland
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
There’s a fair bit of exposed carbon on mine.
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
There will be exposed carbon but the arrangement will change.
As I mentioned above there are many reasons for this change. One of them is in response to feedback from Rich about his frames, I realised I was over-building the joints and this contributed to some front end harshness.
Mark Kelly
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
Originally Posted by
RichTheRoadie
There’s a fair bit of exposed carbon
on mine.
A fair bit, but not as much as it looks like there will be at this stage! I'll watch and learn. Well, i'll watch anyway.
Colin Mclelland
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
To be clear, i'm just curious....
Colin Mclelland
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
By calculation, the exposed carbon will be 3% of the surface area of the main triangle, not counting the carbon bottom bracket "lug". Most of the area you can see exposed will be covered by wood tessellae applied between the areas of carbon.
I finish the head tube after the main joints are bonded and wrapped: I'll add another layer of carbon between the joints to bring the surface back to cylindrical before adding the final layers.
Mark Kelly
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
Wood tessellae. I knew it would be something obvious! Now that I've googled it, i'm not so ignorant...
Colin Mclelland
-
Re: Lyrebird Cycles
There have been many times where I've thought I'd bitten off more than I could chew, but the last week and a bit takes the biscuit.
Carbon dropouts with integrated direct mount brakes and Mavic's "Speed Release" through axle system, formed in 3D printed moulds:
Dropouts_1
I was a bit generous cutting the prepreg for the layup in a couple of places but that will trim off and I didn't want to be short.
The stainless axle wear plates were co-moulded into the dropouts. The hex form visible in the lowest clamshell will hold the threaded boss for the through axle. BTW the thread form is M12 x 1 double lead: try buying a tap for that off the shelf.
The green foam and release fabric provide the pressure for the moulding process and enable release from the moulds.
Mark Kelly
-
-
Re: Tall Trees
Mountain Ash? We had one in the yard when I was a child. It was a slow grower and scattered little orange pea sized berries about. Not what a child wanted when having to mow the lawn. Andy
Andy Stewart
10%
-
Re: Tall Trees
Different tree, you are the other side of the Wallace Line, so you will be referring to Sorbus americana.
Many Australian trees were named by Poms who knew nothing about them, so our mountain ash (Eucalytpus regnans) is so called because it has a pale straight grained wood like English ash (Fraxinius spp) and grows in the mountains near Melbourne.
Mark Kelly
-
Re: Tall Trees
Originally Posted by
Mark Kelly
Poms
Originally 'PoHM' - or Prison of his Majesty - which got shortened to POM by said convicts who eventually (mostly) became the lazy Aussies who populated this massive country...
Home from home, if you will. Although I personally have no criminal record; and I haven't traced my bloodline to know if any of my relatives (or "relos" in Aussie slang) were on those first fleets.
I jest (aside from the origin of the 'POM' thing; ad my own criminal record) - I bloody love the place.
-
Re: Tall Trees
Common furphy but not supported by the evidence. According to Chalmer's "Dictionary of Australian Slang", the most likely derivation is rhyming slang: "pomegranate" for immigrant, shortened to "Pom"
Mark Kelly
-
Re: Tall Trees
Originally Posted by
Mark Kelly
the most likely derivation is rhyming slang: "pomegranate" for immigrant
No East Londoners can have made the first fleets, based on the quality of that rhyming slang!
-
Re: Tall Trees
Australian rhyming slang was its own thing. Some of them, as you say, lack a certain poetic quality. Some, however, are pearlers: "septic" for yank, the official explanation is it is from "septic tank" because they're big and full of shit.
Mark Kelly
-
Re: Tall Trees
My favourite Aussie slang vid:
It’s all in good jest, Mark - I love ‘youse’ Aussies! Especially when you build bikes like yours.
...aaaand we’re back on topic...!
-
Re: Tall Trees
I thought I’d heard that the origin of ‘pom’ derived from French word ‘pomme’ (apple) because English red complexion.
But what do I know - I’m just a ‘sepo’
Similar Threads
-
By Boedie in forum Smoked Out
Replies: 30
Last Post: 11-22-2014, 05:45 PM
-
By magnoliacycles in forum Smoked Out
Replies: 25
Last Post: 04-11-2011, 04:57 PM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Bookmarks