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kickstand? maybe?
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my last mtb/touring bike had a regular rear kickstand, clamped to the chainstay with an arm that went up to clamp onto the seatstay. worked well even with loaded panniers (20 lbs). i just put the new bike together, with a rear disc that limits the type of kickstand (if any). the BMC frame has these two boltholes on the chainstay to mount a kickstand. so i got one as pictured, bolted on, and hooray it works. BUT.....how much leverage or torque will that there kickstand apply to the chainstay? i assume there were engineers, smarter than i, who designed this thing, aware that it could/would be used with loaded panniers. it just looks a little scary. i'd hate to be on tour in cambodia, put the bike on the kickstand, then have the chainstay snap. anyone heard of someone who read about an urban intenet rumour of someone who's kickstand cracked/bent their chainstay? p.s....the shark fin is a billet aluminum rack mount. those same genius engineers designed dropouts that wouldn't allow mounting a standard rack. |
So you are requesting rumors and hearsay, as I read it?
Koga Miyata And Tout Terrain,also use a KS mount in that location. and I note the Plietcher 'zoom' model, which Is, via bolts between the foot and the rest of the stand, is adjustable in length.. seems to me,that is how the torque is controlled, how far off center the bike is leaning. [I have the Zoom model for mounting on the central KS plate.] |
The way it is arranged i don't think that significant torque will be applied by the kickstand, only a compressional load along the axis of the stand tube. The only way to apply torque would be to grab and pull the stand and use it as a lever; even then you would have to pull pretty damn hard to even flex the chainstay, much less "snap" it.
If you are going to replace logical thought and basic physics with concern about urban internet rumors you had better stay home at your computer where it is safe. |
there are lots of neat gadgets that are great in theory, not so great in practice.
i've never seen a mount like this....pretty rare in this part of the world. maybe it was groovy popular for a year, then abandoned. so if someone had one, loaded up their touring rig, and damaged their aluminium bike, would they admit it? course not. they'd say they knew a friend who............ and here's a logical thought: bicycles are often left in the main reception hall in hotels here in asia. desk clerks get bored, like to play on the big foreigner's big bike. they'll often be seen sitting on a parked bike with the kickstand down. what's the compressional load of a 140-pound vietnamese desk clerk jumping on the shoulders of another 140-pound vietnamese desk clerk sitting on a bike with the stand down? |
Noe we are getting somewhere, moving from urban internet rumors to speculative anecdotes.
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A simplistic approach to quell the concern would be bend the kickstand a bit then straighten it back out. That way if to much load is applied the kickstand will fail fist.
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