Bike frame material rankings!
#1
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Thread Starter
Bike frame material rankings!
Here are mine:
Speed/performance (ideal frame for racing.)
1: Carbon
2: Aluminum
3: Titanium
4: Steel
Comfort:
1: Steel
2: Titanium
3: Carbon
4: Aluminum
Durability:
1: Steel
2: Titanium
3: Aluminum
4: Carbon
Sustainability (environmental impact)
1: Aluminum
2: Steel
3: Titanium
4: Carbon
Opinions?
Speed/performance (ideal frame for racing.)
1: Carbon
2: Aluminum
3: Titanium
4: Steel
Comfort:
1: Steel
2: Titanium
3: Carbon
4: Aluminum
Durability:
1: Steel
2: Titanium
3: Aluminum
4: Carbon
Sustainability (environmental impact)
1: Aluminum
2: Steel
3: Titanium
4: Carbon
Opinions?
#2
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I smell popcorn.
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Carbon tops comfort for me too. At least carbon frames optimised for comfort. One of the advantages of carbon is the ability to design a frame with almost any ride characteristics you like with less compromise than metal equivalents.
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Let's play.
Speed: Carbon fiber, then everything else
Comfort: Carbon fiber, then everything else. If you want comfort, buy a CF endurance bike designed to be comfortable, not a super stiff race bike.
Durability (provided you don't crash): CF, Steel & Titanium, Aluminium
Sustainability: Steel then aluminium / titanium and then CF, but it's largely overstated; the CO2 equivalent of a CF road bike is about 197 CO2 equivalent. That's the typical emissions you'd see driving for 1100km in a fairly economical car. If you drive a big truck, slash that in half.
Speed: Carbon fiber, then everything else
Comfort: Carbon fiber, then everything else. If you want comfort, buy a CF endurance bike designed to be comfortable, not a super stiff race bike.
Durability (provided you don't crash): CF, Steel & Titanium, Aluminium
Sustainability: Steel then aluminium / titanium and then CF, but it's largely overstated; the CO2 equivalent of a CF road bike is about 197 CO2 equivalent. That's the typical emissions you'd see driving for 1100km in a fairly economical car. If you drive a big truck, slash that in half.
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I think it all depends on the person doing the evaluation and the exact model of bike. I've ridden plenty of lousy steel bikes to know that steel isn't a guarantee for anything. Though I have ridden two or three really great steel bikes. Still frame material is the least important. What's important is that the design and use of any material take advantage of the qualities and short comings of that material.
One nit pick might be on the environmental side....
Aluminum takes a pretty big hit for pollution when first mined both for water use and pollution while refining as well as electrical demands to smelt initially. And it seems that few people ever scrap their bikes so that any recycling can actually be done with them. Apparently they just show up on eBay and Craigslist forever no matter what material they are made from.
One nit pick might be on the environmental side....
Aluminum takes a pretty big hit for pollution when first mined both for water use and pollution while refining as well as electrical demands to smelt initially. And it seems that few people ever scrap their bikes so that any recycling can actually be done with them. Apparently they just show up on eBay and Craigslist forever no matter what material they are made from.
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#6
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With all due respect... Ugh 
Bike manufacturers are pretty good these days at tuning frames to their intended purpose. CF and aluminum in particular give designers a lot of latitude, but even round-tubed steel and ti can be butted or otherwise adjusted. Other components of the bike, such as the wheels, tires, tire pressure, saddle, seatpost, suspension and so on also have a big impact on these qualities -- in some cases, possibly overwhelming the properties we normally associate with the frame. And of course, budget is always a factor.
These are just a few reasons why broad rankings like this don't really make much sense. If someone asks for a recommendation on a bike, you have to listen to their uses, find out how much they are willing to spend, and go from there.

Bike manufacturers are pretty good these days at tuning frames to their intended purpose. CF and aluminum in particular give designers a lot of latitude, but even round-tubed steel and ti can be butted or otherwise adjusted. Other components of the bike, such as the wheels, tires, tire pressure, saddle, seatpost, suspension and so on also have a big impact on these qualities -- in some cases, possibly overwhelming the properties we normally associate with the frame. And of course, budget is always a factor.
These are just a few reasons why broad rankings like this don't really make much sense. If someone asks for a recommendation on a bike, you have to listen to their uses, find out how much they are willing to spend, and go from there.
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Subscribed! I've been looking for this info for a while. Good thing someone finally started a thread on it.
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Proportions of bike sales (categorized by frame material) for a prominent British bike company, i.e., Wiggle, according to a senior manager:
1. Aluminum
2. Aluminum, cont.
3. Carbon
4. Steel
5, Titanium
Those proportions are consistent with what you'll see on the sales floors of the vast majority of bike shops in the U.S., except that you'll see very few (if any) steel bikes and no titanium bikes.
1. Aluminum
2. Aluminum, cont.
3. Carbon
4. Steel
5, Titanium
Those proportions are consistent with what you'll see on the sales floors of the vast majority of bike shops in the U.S., except that you'll see very few (if any) steel bikes and no titanium bikes.
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These steel vs. carbon vs. titanium vs. aluminum threads are all started by Big Bamboo. Once they get us fighting against each other, they'll swoop in and take over the industry. They are ready for this -- I've seen the massive bamboo forests.
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#15
Sr Member on Sr bikes
Frame material COMFORT ? Isn’t rider’s comfort determined by rider-bike interface components…saddle, handlebars, cranks/pedals/shoes, maybe suspension if the bike is so equipped, tire size and inflation…and the proper adjustment of those components? When I’m riding I don’t even touch the frame. How can frame material affect my comfort?
Dan
Dan
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Sequestering carbon into bike frames is a fantastic way to reverse global warming.
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I would think titanium would be tops since cracks in critical areas don’t matter.
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I like bikes with frames.
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#21
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If we could superimpose the material choices here onto a thread about chain lubes.... It'll be like discovering plutonium by accident!
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Ah, yes. Thanks for the reminder. The OP has offered up so many....umm...interesting posts that it's hard to remember all of them.
Last edited by BillyD; 11-01-22 at 07:35 AM. Reason: Trolling
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Let’s not get into past threads, there’s a general rule regarding that level of stirring up stuff. Anybody who doesn’t like the contents of a thread … ANY thread … is free to leave. But you are not free to harass. If one believes a poster is a troll, then leave, don’t feed the troll. Easy peasy.
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