Originally Posted by
EmbroJames
On a unit by unit basis, I believe that to be true, yes.
To answer your question as directly as I can, carbon frames can be made more cheaply and in greater numbers because of the reasons Mr. Auk outlined above. Costs on carbon frame production are front-loaded - most of the cost is associated with tooling, molds, designs and some R&D and prototyping. Once this is established, the cost per frame is minimal and certainly requires less labor and time than building a metal frame. This is not commentary on the adequacy or inadequacy of carbon as a material, just a fact of the modern bicycle mass manufacturing processes. The point I tried to make in our Corsa piece is not to disparage carbon bicycles; it's to point out the reasons why carbon has eclipsed all other frame materials seen on the pro and elite amateur race scene, and to illustrate that this is nothing to do with any inherent performance characteristics of the material but rather due to economic factors. With Embrocation we're trying to bring Gaulzetti to a larger audience, some of whom may be predisposed to underestimate any high end race bicycle that is not made from carbon. So, we try to educate a bit is all.
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