Is Carbon REALLY Better Than Aluminium?

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 278

  • @peterharrington8709
    @peterharrington8709 Год назад +129

    Worth considering that the aluminum frame is recyclable too. Carbon is going to landfill. 💚

    • @zedddddful
      @zedddddful Год назад +2

      Though carbon theoretically has a longer lifespan so unless you damage it you should be able to keep it going longer.

    • @Zuckler455
      @Zuckler455 Год назад +1

      you can now also recycle carbon

    • @buster.keaton
      @buster.keaton Год назад +11

      In theory, aluminum is recyclable. However, I've never heard of anyone recycling their bike frame in the decades I've been riding. Heck, I wouldn't even know where to take it to have it recycled (in the USA).

    • @johns3106
      @johns3106 Год назад +15

      @@buster.keaton. Any scrap metal place would take an aluminum frame. Many towns have scrap metal drop-off at their transfer stations. Any business that produces scrap metal in the course of manufacturing (or repair)would have a dumpster that they would most likely be happy to have you throw your frame into (more $$ for them!). Scrap metal is generally pretty easy to get rid of.

    • @peterharrington8709
      @peterharrington8709 Год назад

      @@buster.keaton interesting. Scrap yards and scrap metal dealers are very common in UK. However it should be said that a single bicycle frame has very little monetary value indeed.... maybe only £5 so most folk would likely just take a bike to the local municipal recycling tip if it's no longer needed. Sad to think about it like, but yeah it would be dismembered and hopefully get a second third fourth etc life from there.

  • @SecwetGwiwer
    @SecwetGwiwer Год назад +152

    103 grams difference! For the nearly £1000 price difference, you could fit an expensive wheelset and it’d be lighter AND more aero.

    • @veganpotterthevegan
      @veganpotterthevegan Год назад +10

      I'd much rather have the carbon bike. The weight is the least important benefit of carbon over aluminum. Also, £1000 isn't an expensive wheelset. Owning over 20 road bikes in my time, I'd rather have a middling carbon bike from the last 10yrs than the very best aluminum bike with the best components

    • @sjurk81
      @sjurk81 Год назад +16

      Switch the seatpost for the carbon one Trek offers and the bikes have the same weight.

    • @Zuckler455
      @Zuckler455 Год назад +2

      Its not just about the weight, carbon also eliminate the vibration.

    • @sjurk81
      @sjurk81 Год назад +11

      ​@@Zuckler455 I don't 'feel' any difference between my carbon and aluminium bikes but that's just me and others may feel it. But by using a carbon seatpost you will get more compliance.

    • @mlee6050
      @mlee6050 Год назад +2

      ​@@sjurk81just tyre pressure would be more effective, I got trek Emonda ALR frame sadly 54 as didn't know could buy still from trek for a 56, but estimate on my build is like 6.88kg at lightest, the SLR 9 is 6.72kg for like double the price, yes I could probably go lighter than SLR 9 but I don't want to spend like £500 more than I planning to at the moment, oh the my build is with pedals too but I bet trek claim of slr 9 is without

  • @318ishonk
    @318ishonk Год назад +42

    I bought the Trek Emonda ALR 2023 aluminium frameset this year (in a rather nice white paintjob) and would recommend that frame.
    - It's a few grams lighter than my chinese Carbon gravel frame (same size of 56)
    - It's ca. GBP 3000 less expensive than a ca. 400g lighter TREK Emonda SLR or Specialized Tarmac SL7 frame (the Emonda SL frame is almost same weight as aluminium)
    - It allowed me to use lightweight aftermarket carbon parts for integrated handlebars and 400mm seatpost (carbon Emonda frame doesn't accommodate my long legs)
    - The welds are real subtle and don't stand out. On first glance you would only know from the BB area that it's not a carbon frame
    - cables are all hidden away in the handlebars / frame which was my requirement for the purchase
    - Chinese carbon frames would still offer a better weight/price ratio but the quality you get is often a matter of luck and the resell-value is very low.
    The Emonda ALR frame is really stiff and I'm using Vittoria Corsa Pro TL tyres in 32mm to compensate for that (effective width 34mm on my carbon rims).
    My aluminium Emonda weighs 8.2kg including Shimano XT pedals, computer mount and a bottle cage. Parts are a mix of DI2 Ultegra and GRX, handlebars are Bontrager carbon, seatpost noname carbon, saddle is a heavy Selle SMP Drakon. Carbon wheels are a chinese Velosa brand (CX 45 )

    • @philipsiebenhaar1674
      @philipsiebenhaar1674 Год назад

      I bought the same frame. It’s looks awesome and rides great too

  •  Год назад +40

    Although my road bike is full carbon, my future gravelbike purchase will probably be aluminium. I always feel a bit anxious damaging the carbon frame in some way, and it feels easier to just get up and ride wherever, whenever I want using aluminium. Although the one thing I do like about Carbon frames, is the way they are able to be shaped, and can look quite refined. Don't underestimate the importance of looks to a lot of people!

    • @DSBSB
      @DSBSB Год назад +6

      Aluminium is not tougher than carbon, nor is it easier to repair. The only reason for riding aluminium is price - I have an aluminium mountain bike, because I don't want to pay carbon prices to replace it, if it gets wrecked, and the suspension and tyres negate dampen any difference in ride characteristics.
      For road bikes, carbon is superior in every way, except for cost.

    • @Yocambio
      @Yocambio Год назад +6

      If you crash hard enough on a carbon mountain bike to seriously damage the frame it's not the only thing that's going to be damaged. You're likely to sustain significant injuries yourself. Carbon mountain bikes are ridden hard by experienced riders and seem durable enough. I have a carbon gravel bike and a carbon road bike and I would never go back to aluminum. I would, however, consider titanium, having owned a titanium road bike for 17 years (albeit with a carbon fork).

    • @AutoCAD681
      @AutoCAD681 Год назад +8

      Had an aluminum frame cracked can't repair, bin it. My carbon frame cracked, and it's now repaired and riding again

    •  Год назад +2

      @@DSBSB Definitely, I believe it's just a feeling towards carbon than facts. The higher price making it feel more 'precious' and unwilling to damage it. I might feel the same having an expensive or more high end aluminium frame. For road I will always go for carbon if I can pay the price

    • @GuitaristOfEvil
      @GuitaristOfEvil Год назад +5

      You may consider to rather go for steel ;)

  • @luisgarcia22
    @luisgarcia22 Год назад +53

    I'm a simple, recession kinda guy. I see aluminum, I buy it. It's affordable Won't be that expensive to replace. I won't be worried to damage if I lean it in a wall, corner, or by looking at it. I can upgrade the components with the money I saved. I don't care much about the 500 gram weight difference, etc.

    • @luisgarcia22
      @luisgarcia22 Год назад

      BTW did Trek work on the script with you guys? That ugly weld bit nod to the Allez Sprint was unnecessary lol.

    • @ianpurcell7266
      @ianpurcell7266 Год назад +1

      Well said. I do run carbon but like you said you can’t leave it out of your sight for fear it will get stolen.

    • @tomasiskooo
      @tomasiskooo Год назад +1

      My first bike was 10 kg GT Grade with aluminium frame and wheels (carbon fork). My second bike was 8.5 kg Canyon Grail SLX 8 with carbon frame and carbon wheels and di2. I couldnt believe the difference. I am never going back. But yeah, it was 3 x more expensive.

    • @okayest_amateur
      @okayest_amateur Год назад +1

      @@ianpurcell7266 Very true, but you cant leave an aluminum bike out there either...

    • @gregmorrison7320
      @gregmorrison7320 Год назад +1

      @@tomasiskooo But those are gravel bikes and the difference is much more pronounced, the difference in comfort is negligible on a road bike.

  • @BennyOcean
    @BennyOcean Год назад +35

    I have a Cannondale CAAD12. I've test ridden carbon bikes that cost way more, but honestly I prefer my cheaper aluminum/alloy bike.

    • @Penalist
      @Penalist Год назад +1

      In which respect do you prefer it?

    • @maritanonneman3333
      @maritanonneman3333 9 месяцев назад +2

      0:17 caad12 is a rocket.join the club

  • @richcrompton6891
    @richcrompton6891 Год назад +13

    I’d have to pick the aluminium one. I’ve got a Trek 1.5 aluminium bike, and it’s a great workhorse. It’s bombproof and the hydroformed tubes still look great after nearly 16 years of use and abuse and a £1000 would buy some great upgrades!

    • @Stefanosinf
      @Stefanosinf Год назад +2

      Go for it. Absolutelly a brilliant aluminium bike! Already doe 5K with it ad love it. (I bought it as a frameset ad build it to taste...)

    • @richcrompton6891
      @richcrompton6891 Год назад

      @@Stefanosinf I think that is where my money is going! Thanks for the additional input

  • @mysteriousMatchStick
    @mysteriousMatchStick Год назад +59

    One thing they don't mention in this video is that the higher end aluminum bike, like the one shown in the video, comes with a carbon fork. Can you call an aluminum bike that has a carbon fork and aluminum bike? The carbon fork makes a huge difference in soaking up vibration, compared to an aluminum fork and hence offers a very smooth ride. For me aluminum frame with carbon fork and 30mm tires offers excellent value.

    • @davidcornelis3792
      @davidcornelis3792 Год назад +7

      Agreed. The wider tires made a big difference in comfort.

    • @MrDrunkenMoose
      @MrDrunkenMoose Год назад +14

      I get what you're saying but in practice the point is pretty irrelevant. Virtually every decent aluminum Roadbike comes with a carbon fork today

    • @larkiess
      @larkiess Год назад +3

      Carbon wheels and carbon fork makes the difference between the two frame materials virtually meaningless. My CAAD frame only weighs a bit more than a carbon bike frame which costs 10-20% more

    • @adamweb
      @adamweb Год назад +1

      You're exactly right, this is why so many ALU bikes come with carbon forks

    • @veganpotterthevegan
      @veganpotterthevegan Год назад +3

      You can barely find bikes with aluminum forks these days.

  • @stevebassett8944
    @stevebassett8944 Год назад +7

    Which way would I go..... well, I just bought an Emonda ALR frameset. Going to build it up with 105 Di2, carbon wheelset lightweight 35mm deep with GP5000's, and mount carbon seat post, premium saddle and premium bar and stem, and fancy bar tape. The crank length and the bar width is what I choose to put on not what the manufacturer wants to supply. So, in effect I'm up-grading in advance and not buying something knowing that I'm going to replace in short order. Just a note that the ALR is a beautiful frame, fitted with carbon forks/steerer. It's going to be a fantastic bike. I do have a Trek aluminum endurance/gravel bike which I have owned 10 years, still in great shape just a little heavy with Alpha 100 series tubes. I will still use the on gravel/rough back country roads.

  • @anthonyfalvey526
    @anthonyfalvey526 Год назад +6

    Last year I was facing the choice between a Tarmac SL7 comp or an Allez Sprint with upgrades for the same money. I ended up going with the Allez Sprint and I’m glad I did. I got a nice set of carbon wheels, aero carbon bars and a fancy 3D printed saddle all within the budget of the tarmac. Granted, that bike came with electronic shifting but I feel as if I’ve got a far more ‘race ready’ setup now.
    Plus, not having to worry about the frame material is a bonus.

  • @clas683
    @clas683 Год назад +6

    I have two carbon roadbikes and one made from aluminium. It’s a Canyon Endurace AL and it is as comfortable as the others with thin seat stays and a good composite seatpost. Weight penaly for that frame is 300g but its rim brakes are 400g lighter. Al is still a very good material for most bikes where aero tubing is not important.

  • @marekbabal392
    @marekbabal392 Год назад +6

    good comparison and explanation. I do not know much about road bikes, I ride MTB. As mentioned, the AL bike has carbon fork, so the difference in over-all ride feel may not be that great. For years I thought that carbon is not for me, mainly because the price/value. Back in 2017 the bike I really wanted was available only in carbon (TREK Procaliber). I went for it and soon I realized what carbon is about. It simply soaks up vibrations better than AL. I felt a bit less beaten after riding our local trails than on my AL bike before. My rides became longer, fatigue came later (while I am getting older), simply a better ride experience.

  • @viktorlenart1125
    @viktorlenart1125 Год назад +3

    I used to ride my Emonda ALR for 7 years, and loved every bit of it, but now, as I am slowly creeping into the MAMIL territory, I switched to a TCR and there is no way I would ever go back. The amount of comfort is just insane and I am just as fast (or rather slow), as I was on my Emonda.

    • @boyaijau6695
      @boyaijau6695 8 месяцев назад +1

      same, ive rode the first gen emonda alr back in 2016, it was great, but the TCR is something else. comfort ,speed ,twitchy, smiles for miles

  • @Hintonbro.
    @Hintonbro. Год назад +3

    Best video I have seen on this topic - a good description of pros & cons here.

  • @AutoCAD681
    @AutoCAD681 Год назад +6

    "Repairing aluminium frame is a complex job" is an understatement. You can't repair an aluminium frame without costing more than a new frame

    • @bikeman123
      @bikeman123 Год назад +2

      Probably also the same with carbon, titanium and steel. Who repairs anything these days?

    • @stevenfreeman7798
      @stevenfreeman7798 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yes you can I welded alloy tubing for 25 years it's a piece of piss.

  • @renzoespinabernal5403
    @renzoespinabernal5403 11 месяцев назад +1

    I have had an aluminum bike for 6 years; it's a Scott Speedster. With the passage of time, I have had the opportunity to participate in some races with it. Obviously, I have changed some parts, and I recently upgraded the groupset, but the performance of the bike has been the best. In summary, there is nothing that I can't do with it that another carbon bike would do better. Greetings from Colombia

  • @bonbonflippers4298
    @bonbonflippers4298 Год назад +18

    I would go aluminum over carbon. I just cant shake off the thought of cracking the frame.

    • @alphaniner3770
      @alphaniner3770 Год назад +1

      Well, then better go to steel or titanium. I had two aluminium handle bars and two carbon seat posts breaking so far. All due to prior damage I must admit, but when aluminium breaks there is absolutely no warning.

    • @thedownunderverse
      @thedownunderverse Год назад +3

      @@alphaniner3770thats a complete crock

    • @okayest_amateur
      @okayest_amateur Год назад +3

      Never cracked a carbon frameset. They are much harder than you think. They had some guy hit it with a metal hammer and it took quite a few good hits to get it to crack.

    • @bonbonflippers4298
      @bonbonflippers4298 Год назад +2

      @brianhwang4445 I'm not scared of cracks that's visible to see as you can immediately tell the frame is done, I am more concerned of micro-cracks within the frame. Those are what worries me

    • @okayest_amateur
      @okayest_amateur Год назад +4

      @@bonbonflippers4298 I have several quality carbon road bikes close to 10 years old and have never had a concern. it takes many microfractures for carbon to give way. Anything significant will show through the paint. Plus carbon has an infinite lifespan as long as it is not stretched to the beeaking limit compared to aluminum which will eventually succumb to metal fatigue. But you should definitely ride the bike that makes you feel safer. For example i would rather have an alu gravel bike for the same reasons you mentioned.

  • @josephsculpepper4468
    @josephsculpepper4468 Год назад +2

    I like your video! I use to race when I was under 20 yrs old. I recently purchased a specialized carbon Roubaix with campy crankset 52-42 and 14-25 cassette. It is maybe 2012 age model,I love it a lot ,though I really miss my vintage basso frame with campagnolo group set. J.s.

  • @justsomedude7556
    @justsomedude7556 Год назад

    Back in 2016, I was looking at the Emonda SL7 and as I was chatting with the bike shop crew as I am a long time customer, they started to put together the new Emonda ALR. I took the bike for a short ride and blew off the SL and bought the ALR. I transfer the Ultegra I had on another bike, and put the 105 on that frame and sold it. I put some carbon bars and seat post on it and the bike has been a jewel of a find. I got the weight down to just under 16 lbs. Over the last couple of years I put some 50mm carbon TLR wheels on it, and late last year, I put SRAM Force eTap AXS on it and put on a more aero carbon bar on it. Some would think I am crazy to put that on this frame, but I don't care, the ride is glorious and I still put 3K miles on it a year even though I have a high end carbon frame bike as well. Both bikes are in normal rotation. My ALR is still the lower weight of both bikes, now just over 16 lbs.

  • @Stefanosinf
    @Stefanosinf Год назад +1

    Got the ALR and got to say i love it to bits. Got it as a frameset and build it myself so i have it as i like it.
    If you're thinkig about it, don't! With the moey saved i've got a wheelset.
    Final build weight for size 50 is 7.6kg with full Ultegra R8000, Alloy bars, carbon stem, seatpost and Elite Ultralight 45mm wheelset...
    (I have some vids on my channel, if somoene is interested)

  • @TheChancerdog1
    @TheChancerdog1 Год назад +6

    I loved my alloy emonda .. carbon seatpost is a big help but my carbon Madone is way smoother

  • @FlyingPastilla
    @FlyingPastilla Год назад +3

    You can find good aluminium frames second-hand for cheap and upgrade nearly everything
    The result is usually a better overall bike than a new, budget-oriented carbon frame and will still be cheaper.
    On the other hand buying a used carbon frame is like playing russion roulette.
    I'll get a high-end carbon frame when I have 8-10k to splash onto one, otherwise it's just stressful

  • @filipski595
    @filipski595 8 месяцев назад +1

    I used to be big fan of alloy, as I like to treat my bikes s tools rather than fancy thing,
    BUT
    I bouyght one used carbon CV frame for commuting, and maan is it smooth, it feels like I'm running 45mm tyres rather than 35, and still even with bigger volume tyres, when you go through a pothole, my carbon frame feels so much smoother.
    Currently I changed the seatpost on my alloy road bike to carbon, and I'm prety sure it also makes a big difference. Probably next season I'll go with Carbon frame.
    Ps. it can be matter of the bike fit, but up to that point I was riding always alloy, and honestly the carbon frame feels different, absorbs so much of the road vibration, and smoothens the bumps.

  • @buster.keaton
    @buster.keaton Год назад +6

    For the Emonda, the ALR seems like the better choice as the weight savings is so minimal and rider comfort isn't really what that bike is designed for. However, for the Madone or Domane where the frame is designed to flex for rider comfort, carbon is the only way to go.

  • @solitaryrefinement6787
    @solitaryrefinement6787 Месяц назад

    Great breakdown. Here's the short version...
    Carbon: Longer rides, slightly lighter, undeniably better performance.
    Aluminum: More likely to survive a crash, stronger for accessorizing, much cheaper.
    If you race and can afford replacing crashed frames or if you ride for long rides, carbon. If you're a recreational rider that rarely puts in long rides, aluminum is an excellent choice.
    Or, get a magnesium and beat all of them for less money and a lot less weight and equal performance to carbon (compliance, stiffness, comfort, weight, durability, etc...).

  • @Wideopen69
    @Wideopen69 Год назад

    A technical brilliant welding-mark is like art!

  • @becyk_du_quebec
    @becyk_du_quebec Год назад +7

    8.89kg for a carbon bike that price is actually outrageous...

    • @quynho5265
      @quynho5265 Год назад +1

      And the Emonda is marketed as "lightweight" climbing bike lmao

    • @gregmorrison7320
      @gregmorrison7320 Год назад

      Yeah the carbon Treks are not very light.

    • @EverythingWasGreat
      @EverythingWasGreat 6 месяцев назад

      @@gregmorrison7320 most non pro level carbon bikes are heavy.

  • @gkott78
    @gkott78 8 месяцев назад

    Recently went shopping for a carbon bike to replace a 10 year old aluminum Fuji Roubaix. Tried quite a few and they felt great but i was shocked by the weights. 20.5 pounds on a Trek Madone SL6, and my old Fuji weighed in at 19lbs with tiagra. I went home, bought about 1000 dollars worth of upgrade parts and a cheap set of superteam carbon wheels. I shaved another pound off the aluminum Fuji, made it more aero with 50mm deep carbon wheels and niw have a full 105 drive train thats bullet proof. I went from 23c tires to 25c GP5000's and it made a world of difference. I may go 28c for my next set. All in all im happy for now and im going to ride it until it falls apart. Bike price in early 2024 are insane.... hopefully things settle a bit. My only gripe with my setup is rim brakes on carbon wheels, they are terrible. Luckily i live in a flat area. If i lived anywhere there climbs and decents i would absolutely replace the bike for a newer disc brake equipped model.

  • @chrisjovan664
    @chrisjovan664 3 месяца назад

    I have a 2018 cannondale caadx and I’d say it feels better than any fully carbon bike. What and how I ride it differs from how a person who rides a fully carbon road bike for their fit and use. It wonderful that bikes come in many materials they all have their uses and to get the best use out of your bike consider your fit and it’s fit for the job you intend its uses for. Your bike should fit you in all the ways the term fit it used.

  • @Jackisaboss1208
    @Jackisaboss1208 10 месяцев назад

    I got lucky! Found an Emonda SL5 on clearance at my LBS for $1650. Best of both worlds :)

  • @THE_W0RLD_1S_Y0UR5
    @THE_W0RLD_1S_Y0UR5 Год назад +5

    Get a second hand alloy bike and put a second hand carbon finishing kit, second hand carbon wheels and second hand ultegra 11 speed Di2 on it

  • @sbleistein
    @sbleistein 8 месяцев назад

    I own and ride 2015/2016 Trek Émonda SL, ALR, and SLR frames, all of which I have built up with Dura Ace/Ultegra components, Bontrager XXX carbon stems and bars, and Fulcrum Racing Zero wheels. The similarity in feel and ride quality is remarkable. The weight differences are negligible. The ALR is astonishing. The ride is only slightly harsher than the carbon Émondas. However, I appreciate the stiffness in climbs and sprints. The frame flexes far less than the SLR and SL. The ALR feels like it just wants to go. As for looks, Trek’s aluminum technology is distinct from what I have seen of the CAADs and Allez Sprints. There are no messy joints on the ALR. It looks like a carbon frame.

  • @MekanikoMartilyo
    @MekanikoMartilyo Год назад +6

    Steel all the way!!

  • @jflemingsandiego
    @jflemingsandiego Год назад +2

    I think I'd rather go for the aluminum frame and a better group set. For these bikes, jump to the Integra group set.

  • @izzy7067
    @izzy7067 Год назад +8

    Aluminum frame with the upgraded carbon wheelset all day long a better route. Especially since modern aluminum frames are so much lighter, stronger, and aero. And with the ability to run wider tires, I would argue the road compliance is negligible.

  • @radfordbean2164
    @radfordbean2164 10 месяцев назад

    I have the Trek Emonda ALR 5 in the coral and blue. I love it. I'm not a racer but need to tackle hills. I find the bike handles beautifully and doubt the weight difference would benefit me. I also like the fact that the aluminum is more durable. I don't have easy access to having a carbon frame inspected for damage if I take a spill. I am always a little nervous taking my bike over a bump if I am going to damage the carbon fork, but I never worry about the aluminum frame.

  • @ImpreccablePony
    @ImpreccablePony Год назад +1

    That paint job is a winner, I don't care about the material anymore.

  • @jacobrich7785
    @jacobrich7785 Год назад

    I've literally been debating these exact bikes thank you

  • @StanEby1
    @StanEby1 Год назад +2

    Nothing new has been said. The winner in this video is not aluminum or carbon, it's the beautiful landscape. With lanscape like that...magnesium, titanium, steel or bamboo would do just fine.

  • @Joppie86
    @Joppie86 8 месяцев назад +1

    I still have my emonda alr 5 from 2017, tried a couple carbon ones to see if I wanted a new one. But no, I’m still too much satisfied with this one, it’s all I need. Perhaps a carbon one is just slightly more comfortable on really terrible road surfaces, but the 28mm tires took care of the roughness just enough.

  • @jbandt
    @jbandt Год назад +2

    As much as I'd like to one day get a carbon framed bike, I won't. I'm on the high end for most carbon weight limits, and I'd just be too afraid of damaging it. Alu for me.

  • @JohnsBikingPlaylists-ms6uj
    @JohnsBikingPlaylists-ms6uj Год назад +3

    The ALR Emonda is sweet. I have an SL, but almost went with the ALR (ultimately chose carbon because I have an industry discount).
    The biggest difference between the 2 is comfort, followed by aerodynamics. I'm a big fan if the seat mast system, as it adds a lot of compliance to an otherwise ultrastiff frame.
    The frame isn't as aero as some dedicated aero bikes, but it has sacrificed a good deal of weight reduction for aerodynamic tubing.
    And finally, the stiffness makes this bike feel like a rocket when accelerating.

  • @MarkArthur
    @MarkArthur Год назад +5

    But the aluminum emonda has a nicer paint job

  • @michaelsisk5938
    @michaelsisk5938 Год назад

    I went with carbon frame on the Cannondale Topstone 3L bike as it has a better suspension than the aluminum model. Time will tell as the bike was shipped today. I do worry about damage to the carbon frame from a simple fall or other accidents.

  • @richardmiddleton7770
    @richardmiddleton7770 Год назад +1

    They can manipulate carbon better to make it stiffer where it needs to be and compliant everywhere else. I prefer a good aluminium frame because of the stiffness. I've had a GT Series 3 road bike and a Cannondale CaadX and both frames just seemed to transfer the power really well without flex. The nearest I got to a stiff carbon frame was my Cannondale Super six Evo Black Inc, but that was a 3k frame set!

    • @gregmorrison7320
      @gregmorrison7320 Год назад

      Yep I have a 20 year old GT ZR.30 that I still ride alongside my carbon bikes, I feel no flex from this bike and it looks great! For longer endurance rides I use one of my carbon bikes, I can feel the flex in some of the frames in comparison, horses for courses.

  • @fernandovega5722
    @fernandovega5722 Год назад

    I have a custom built aluminum bike that weighs 7.06 kg. and I love the ride.

  • @8888chico
    @8888chico 9 месяцев назад

    Good video!!! When should I change my carbon frame? What is the useful life of a carbon frame?

  • @l.d.t.6327
    @l.d.t.6327 Год назад +1

    Aluminium is a harsh ride (in my experience, but who knows the bikes improved). I know the frame doesn't impact comfort the most (tires do), but I always felt the difference and it made me prefer carbon. To defend myself against comments that think I'm just snobbish, I always prefer steel above aluminium, and even prefer steel above carbon for flat rides.

    • @gregmorrison7320
      @gregmorrison7320 Год назад +2

      My first aluminum road bike with an aluminum fork was harsh, when the frame cracked and was warrantied the replacement had a carbon fork, 20 years later still riding it, if feels stiff when putting the power down but is by no means a harsh ride. For long distance rides I use one of two carbon bikes but note that each has their own bump taming characteristics built in, one Iso Speed, the other a 25mm carbon post and SAVE technology seat stays, neither of which feels like it transfers the power as well as the aluminum bike.

  • @Bonky-wonky
    @Bonky-wonky Год назад +1

    IMO carbon only makes sense on high end bikes that already have fast wheels and light parts so it’s a case of scraping the last few grams. Sadly most bike brands only offer alloy as a budget option, with carbon bikes starting at around 2k which are far from light and have pretty shoddy specs. Within the same price range they could make a better performing alloy bike but are somehow convinced everyone wants carbon. Let’s hope videos like this will change the consumers’ perception, only then the brands will follow.

  • @sjurk81
    @sjurk81 Год назад +1

    I have a carbon domane and an aluminium emonda, both with Ultegra kit. The domane is by far the nicest when climbing, simply because it's the lightest, but on flat terrain there really isn't that much of a difference. I've had both bikes for over five years and the differences I spot are due to the geometry of the bikes and not the material.

    • @langy1318
      @langy1318 Год назад

      You say your Domane is nicer when climbing, what does nicer mean? Asking because I’m not sure which model to go for. Is the domane a fast bike?

    • @sjurk81
      @sjurk81 Год назад +1

      @@langy1318 My Domane is lighter than my emonda, certainly in its 'climbing setup' with light wheels. I also fit better on its more relaxed geometry making longer climbs a lot easier. When you compare both bikes in similar setup, so both carbon or aluminium, same kind of brakes and wheels, the emonda is the 'racy climby' of the two with the domane being the 'more relaxed' one. If you fit well on the emonda, that's the faster one, if you don't the domane will probably be faster because you can keep going for longer.

  • @EstelonAgarwaen
    @EstelonAgarwaen Год назад +1

    Ive got a canyon endurace al and its pretty great. If i were to go full weenie i could go sub 6.8 easily.

  •  5 месяцев назад

    Canyon Endurace AL7, upgraded to high quality saddle, 165mm cranks with dual sided powermeter and TPU inner tubes. Might upgrade to carbon wheels in the future for 0.6kg less in the wheels.

  • @twatts4436
    @twatts4436 Год назад +1

    A good alloy bike is fantastic, although the bottom tier carbon emonda is on the heavier side. I might be wrong, but I think it's got the iso speed on the front which is relatively heavy.
    Had my alloy bmc teammachine for years, it was fantastic ride, but VERY stiff. My new frame has more compliance and it's noticeably smoother.

    • @BAdewale721
      @BAdewale721 Год назад +1

      The isospeed is on the Domane sl not the emonda sl

    • @twatts4436
      @twatts4436 Год назад

      @@BAdewale721 interesting, thought the front iso speed was on all three?

    • @yonglingng5640
      @yonglingng5640 Год назад

      ​​@@twatts4436Only the Domane has it, the Émonda and Madone never have it.

    • @twatts4436
      @twatts4436 Год назад +1

      @@yonglingng5640 ah, you're right. They both had rear iso speed at one point and I've gotten them the wrong way around.

  • @mrniceguy4277
    @mrniceguy4277 5 месяцев назад +2

    9,02kg vs 8,89kg is like 1,5% heavier. But say you weigh 80kg, then the difference becomes around 0,15%. Or, imagine you didn't pee in the last hour. All I'm trying to say is... The weight difference is meaningless here, especially as an amateur.

  • @jempanuncialman9361
    @jempanuncialman9361 Год назад

    I like the "enter some events" hehehe.

  • @Dark_Wings88
    @Dark_Wings88 Год назад

    Lower price point carbon bikes are often not worth it (low stiffness, high weight). You are better off going Aluminium and investing the money in better parts. I also find aluminium (along with steel and Titanium) really practical for gravel or bikes you would go Bikepacking with. The materials are far less prone to scratches than a carbon frame and you get a lot of scratches in both cases even when being careful. For race bikes with decent budget I think Carbon is a no brainer and the best option.

  • @rayschannel1972
    @rayschannel1972 Год назад

    What are the wheels you show in the video? You have not reviewed the Pro level wheels from Bontrager so would be interested to see a review of the Pro 37 and Pro 51 Wheels.

  • @JDRVP
    @JDRVP Год назад

    Love my 2019 Specialized Allez Sprint Sagan with Red etap, Enve SES 6.7 wheels.

  • @yukiko_5051
    @yukiko_5051 Год назад +2

    I only choose alloy over carbon because of its price. If i am rich enough to buy carbon bikes, then i will buy carbon frames

  • @BrianJohnson-bq9tr
    @BrianJohnson-bq9tr Год назад +1

    As ekth many things, there are advantages to both, as well ad disadvantages
    My current bike is an AL and carbon mix and, at my age (62), i am not as interested in speed as i was in my younger days.
    Ive got a carbon seatpost and 38mm tired mkynted and i love the ride.
    The buke is dast enough abd ive ne er bern s climber so that us not an isdue wirh me.
    I am also not in a pisition to be qnle to drop 3+ grand on a bike.
    For me, aluminum works judt fine.

  • @danblekeberg2470
    @danblekeberg2470 6 месяцев назад

    I have had both. Carbon all the way. Or if you want to feel every bump in the road, go aluminum.

  • @okayest_amateur
    @okayest_amateur Год назад +2

    This review is spot on. Aluminum framesets have gone a long way and the performance does not fully justify the price. But when you add up things like road feel, looking cool on your local bunch ride, and stiffness, for me at least its justified because I would love the bike more if it were carbon. Its the big TV argument, once you have a bigger one you cant ever go back and look at the smaller one. Once you have a good carbon frameset its hard to imagine without it due to the enjoyment factor. But if you have always ridden aluminum bikes and are happy keep doing so. Just doing ride carbon because you might be tempted to switch over. Been riding carbon framesets for over 10 years, cant imagine going back. Sorry. And is it just me but does 9kg sound incredibly heavy for a new bike??

    • @cycleoflife565
      @cycleoflife565 Год назад

      9 kg is heavy for the aluminum bike but 8.89 for the carbon isn’t?

    • @okayest_amateur
      @okayest_amateur Год назад

      @@cycleoflife565 no but i understand the sentiment since all these new carbon bikes are so heavy. 6.8 kg will allways be the standard. pro bikes are in the 7.2 kg range. im fortunate enough to ride bikes in the 7-8 kg range with pedals but have never hit the 6.8 kg mark

  • @nodbag6301
    @nodbag6301 Год назад

    Excellent info well presented

  • @kttan72
    @kttan72 6 месяцев назад

    For long term safety, I personally prefer the material that could provide tell-tale signs of breakdown - alloy. I am not a fan of carbon fibre which could unknowingly break without warning.
    Also, the climatic-induced sustainability of carbon fibre material may be my concern especially in regions with climatic extremes (I. E. Constantly high temperature of above 50 degrees celcius with very strong UV. One could never tell how carbon might perform, if not, depreciate, when exposed to the heat and the powerful sunshine).

  • @magicknight8412
    @magicknight8412 Год назад

    A “heavy” carbon bike (thought the emonda was meant to be light!) is not what I would choose. I would go alu here and buy some light carbon wheels.

  • @markvonwisco7369
    @markvonwisco7369 Год назад +1

    If you're on a tight budget, spending an extra £1000 to save 130g doesn't seem like the best investment.

  • @czeckson74
    @czeckson74 10 месяцев назад +1

    9 kg - both are TANKS

  • @mathewemden2068
    @mathewemden2068 Год назад +1

    I have a 2004 Specialized Allez, (alluminum) I looked at upgrading to a carbon bike and to get something that was sub 18lbs (8.16 kg) I would have to spend over 5K. OR for $800 I could buy a new Ultecgra R8000 groupset. I upgraded the groupset then bought a mountain bike for $1000. I saved over $3k and now I can also go mountain biking with my friends!

  • @RayzLeeKL
    @RayzLeeKL Год назад

    Reviews should based on rolling down hill without pedalling to remove power from pedalling. If aero frames are faster... They will roll down faster with same tuck in position?

  • @SrFederico
    @SrFederico Год назад +2

    The welds on the Trek aluminium bike are astonishingly nice. Compare that to the infamous Specialized Allez...

  • @richdubbya
    @richdubbya Месяц назад

    Due to the tech involved in both aluminum, carbon and titanium, the advantages between them to the novice to intermediate rider is marginal at best. Honestly, when it comes to riding on the paths, it'll come down to the eye candy effect..Heck, I've seen guys on columbus steel and rim brakes smoke riders on carbon with discs....All relative.

  • @Shauncat1
    @Shauncat1 Год назад

    I.have the Emonda carbon bike with 35inch carbon wheels. Im looking at getting the aluminum ALR 5 bike for training as well

  • @grahamekellermeier8280
    @grahamekellermeier8280 Год назад

    Im still happy with my old steel frame bikes.

  • @vikaluksena
    @vikaluksena Месяц назад

    I prefer aluminium, less things to worry about and lets you focus on the most important thing, enjoying the ride

  • @nuxxdk
    @nuxxdk Год назад

    …my takeaway from this video is that my 7kg S-Works SL6 is better value than this carbon Emonda, which costs approx £7.5/g saved while my S-Works is merely about an extra £5 per gram saved vs the alloy! 😅

  • @ianpurcell7266
    @ianpurcell7266 Год назад

    What will replace carbon. I’m running carbon since 2001 and would like to buy the next step after carbon.

  • @NickolasBerdzenishvili
    @NickolasBerdzenishvili Год назад +1

    I don't like feel of the carbon bikes. It's too soft, like you don't feel road surface. i owned 2008 Cinelli Unica with Campagnolo Record groupset and it was 8kg with pedals. I loved it, and after riding it, carbon bikes feels like you sitting on rubber frame :D

    • @BennyOcean
      @BennyOcean Год назад +1

      I agree. I don't need all of the road feedback to be nullified. I find it useful to feel the ground under my feet a little. That said, I only ride for about 90 minutes at a time. If I did longer rides, I'd probably get a carbon endurance bike with 32mm tires at low pressure. If I'm going to ride all day then the muted ride feel is probably what I'd be going for.

  • @osobnyw2231
    @osobnyw2231 Год назад

    THIS particular aluminum bike cost nearly the same as similarly spec Giant TCR (8.4kg)... So, which would be better in that comparison, when money and spec are almost same, alu or carbon? ;)

    • @GoriRJ
      @GoriRJ 11 месяцев назад

      Same specs and price, go for carbon. You can feel the difference riding. Not a night and day, but it is there. It is possible for aluminum to corrode. Carbon frames are repairable, aluminum isn't.

  • @howardturner746
    @howardturner746 Год назад

    I have been riding for 5 decades, had dozens of different bikes, in the end you pick what works for you, that doesn't mean carbon or the most expensive, for example I don't like compact frame designs or sloping top tubes, I prefer older style frames. I have a caad 9 with older gen dura ace, really comfy ride particularly with dura ace c24 wheels. I don't like disc, that's my choice, I have never been in a situation where I needed disc brakes on a road bike and I like descending really fast, disc can be too powerful on a road bike and cause the tyres to run out of grip when braking hard, people also just rely on brakes rather than skills, always look ahead and anticipate. I also rode big motorbikes for 3 decades, helps to understand how to slow down from high speeds. N my opinion disc brakes are at best a gimmick to sell more bikes to less experienced cyclists and at worse lul you into a false sense of security and could cause you to crash

  • @timtaylor9590
    @timtaylor9590 11 месяцев назад

    Biggest difference in the two is production costs and method.

  • @gordonegar7717
    @gordonegar7717 Год назад

    Bought an ultegra CAAD12 recently with plenty of upgrades for £800. It’s hardly been ridden, only 7.2kg and feels amazing.

  • @MelitonPutkaradze
    @MelitonPutkaradze 4 месяца назад

    I ride my Rose backroad Aluminium gravel with carbon roval wheelset and sram force 1x system and its lighter and has cleaner look than my mate's Polygon carbon endurance. Even with my brooks saddle and 45c tyres

  • @ImpreccablePony
    @ImpreccablePony Год назад +1

    I've been riding my 2015 carbon LaPierre over cross-country trails and literal wilderness and I have to say: carbon is solid material, no need to babysit your bike too much.

  • @ESR66
    @ESR66 Год назад

    Aluminum for the long run and up grade parts along the way.

  • @georgekrpan3181
    @georgekrpan3181 Год назад

    I went for the aluminum Emonda.

  • @zzhughesd
    @zzhughesd Год назад +5

    I can answer this. Imperceptible. And for most. Alu. The right Alu is just spot on. And more compliant. And better damped for winter. So all around better. Unless fast and young high watts go high quality Alu

  • @ZwiftDude
    @ZwiftDude Год назад

    Would like a re-release of the special edition 2011 Specialized Allez Double Steel bike.

  • @joehiatt1992
    @joehiatt1992 Год назад

    Have 10 bikes & gotta say aluminum if ur gonna keep a bike for a long time as I have already done,carbon is a throw away material

    • @JitinMisra
      @JitinMisra Год назад

      You have carbon bikes break unexpectedly without crashing ? I just bought a carbon bike , I love it to bits compared to my aluminum, but I’m scared lol.. I got an amazing deal so couldn’t pass it up

  • @Msasha2727
    @Msasha2727 Год назад

    The aluminum one is pretty 😍

  • @Sweetskis
    @Sweetskis 7 месяцев назад

    With the £1000 get a Garmin bike computer and a really nice saddle.

  • @alexeyborysevych5460
    @alexeyborysevych5460 Год назад

    I'd choose an aluminum, and saved money spend on upgrades.

  • @BikeLife154
    @BikeLife154 Год назад

    The aluminum Trek is nice except where the cable exits the frame for the rear derailleur! Who thought of that! Looks terrible IMO.

  • @geetee4037
    @geetee4037 Год назад

    The aluminium bike looks a whole lot better too. That carbon Emonda looks terrible compared to the alu version and has all the iso nonsense you don't need. That alu Emonda is the best looking bike Trek has produced for a long time.

  • @sepg5084
    @sepg5084 2 месяца назад

    Better is too broad a term. Better in which metrics?

  • @LOZUPONEJ
    @LOZUPONEJ Год назад +1

    I have an ALR5 trek checkpoint for commuting and a carbon one for off road. You don’t need carbon. Bought both used

  • @ItsMeHammie
    @ItsMeHammie 3 месяца назад

    If that aluminum bike was black it would look just as good as the carbon

  • @everettkincaid3388
    @everettkincaid3388 Год назад +1

    For me, a lighter wheelset and components on an aluminum frameset is the way to go. Regarding the weight of the frame, the difference is very small, especially when you compare aluminum to the entry level or lower quality carbon frames.

  • @jonathanzappala
    @jonathanzappala Год назад

    When the first really good emonda alr came out, they sold an emonda slr, sl, and s. The alr weighed less than the s 😂. And I think that was the last year they sold the s.

  • @tomweis1194
    @tomweis1194 Год назад

    Also an aluminum frame almost certainly has a threaded bottom bracket.

  • @timtaylor9590
    @timtaylor9590 11 месяцев назад

    Construction methods? Well now like geometry that allows for more seat post exposure, plus wider tires. Compliance has nothing to do with how the aluminum frame is made.