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Old 07-10-05 | 03:24 PM
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Retro Grouch
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Joined: Feb 2004
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From: St Peters, Missouri

Bikes: Catrike 559 I own some others but they don't get ridden very much.

Originally Posted by phidauex
Hi,

I recently bought an older road bike (mid 80's), and it has a nice alloy seatpost on it, with finely machined flutes up the side. I've seen this style before, but I don't understand it.

Why flutes? Appearance? Grip? Anti-seize? Weight Reduction? Aerodynamics? Its a neat seatpost, and I've got no problems with it, I'm just curious as to the engineering choice...

peace,
sam
During that era flutes were popular as a weight reduction technique. Other parts, like brake levers commonly had a neat series of holes drilled in them for the same reason. Some guys would amuse themselves by drilling little holes in their brake calipers, derailleurs, chainrings etc. It is a lot of work to get all of the holes evenly spaced and it didn't remove all that much weight either.
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