Search
Notices
Road Cycling “It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them. Thus you remember them as they actually are, while in a motor car only a high hill impresses you, and you have no such accurate remembrance of country you have driven through as you gain by riding a bicycle.” -- Ernest Hemingway

ti vs al

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 05-19-05 | 04:04 PM
  #1  
Thread Starter
Junior Member
 
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 23
Likes: 0
ti vs al

I have been riding for almost a year now and enjoy it more than I thought I would. I am considering upgrading from my $1100 specialized allez to something nicer even though I know the bike is more than adequate for my ability level. I have a few questions about titanium and would appreciate any input you guys may have.

People that have ti bike rave about how much better the ride is. Can someone quantify this a little more.
Are they more responsive? do they soak up road vibration better? What exactly makes ti better than al other than weight?

I have looked at Litespeed which has tons of options and different shaped tubes etc and Moots which seems to be closer to the custom side with the nice welds etc but less options. Has anyone owned both and do you have any opinions on them? Any other ti manufacturers out there that I should look at.

Basically I'm looking to get a smooth comfortable ride that will encourage me to spend more time on the bike, but also for the amount of money I want something with a little soul.
weak is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 04:16 PM
  #2  
Trogon's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 801
Likes: 0
From: central rio grande valley

Bikes: 14 road, 1 SS, 2 MTB

I have a Moots Vamoots and a couple of high end aluminum bikes. At 105psi with a Fizik Pave saddle and similar wheels - they all ride the same. Does the fact that they're high end frames guarantee that they will ride better than your allez - who knows. You might find they're not worth the newly spent 5 grand.

Buy any high end bike in any material because you're looking for an excellent ride.

Buy a ti bike because you like the way they look.
Trogon is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 04:25 PM
  #3  
sydney's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 9,428
Likes: 2
Originally Posted by Trogon
I have a Moots Vamoots and a couple of high end aluminum bikes. At 105psi with a Fizik Pave saddle and similar wheels - they all ride the same. Does the fact that they're high end frames guarantee that they will ride better than your allez - who knows. You might find they're not worth the newly spent 5 grand.

Buy any high end bike in any material because you're looking for an excellent ride.

Buy a ti bike because you like the way they look.
What he said. And despite Litespeeds shaped tubes and all thier hype about it,
makers like Moots,Seven and Merlin do a wonderful job with round tubes. Go for over the top shaping because you like the way it looks.
sydney is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 04:37 PM
  #4  
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 1,179
Likes: 0
Ti is just real NICE
samp02 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 05:18 PM
  #5  
Banned.
 
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 7,460
Likes: 0
hahaha, MERTON is in the house!
Serpico is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 08:46 PM
  #6  
RiPHRaPH's Avatar
Don't Believe the Hype
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,668
Likes: 0
From: chicagoland area

Bikes: 1999 Steelman SR525, 2002 Lightspeed Ultimate, 1988 Trek 830, 2008 Scott Addict

Originally Posted by Trogon
I have a Moots Vamoots and a couple of high end aluminum bikes. At 105psi with a Fizik Pave saddle and similar wheels - they all ride the same. Does the fact that they're high end frames guarantee that they will ride better than your allez - who knows. You might find they're not worth the newly spent 5 grand.

Buy any high end bike in any material because you're looking for an excellent ride.

Buy a ti bike because you like the way they look.
i think what Trogon is saying above is true given a nicely paved surface. If your riding brings you on roads that are less than perfect then Ti beats Al in every single ride category (feel, comfort, life, power transfer) >> although high end Eddy Merkxx Al feels close to Lightspeed Ti.

The strength of good Ti frames lies in its welds and right amount of flex.

**weak: Ti has the 'soul' you are looking for. people love their Ti & CF & steel bikes. I've yet to find the unique love affair with Al that the owners of other materials boast about.
RiPHRaPH is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 10:10 PM
  #7  
sydney's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 9,428
Likes: 2
Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH
If your riding brings you on roads that are less than perfect then Ti beats Al in every single ride category (feel, comfort, life, power transfer)

The strength of good Ti frames lies in its welds and right amount of flex.
Gimmie a break! Where does this stuff get dredged up from?
sydney is offline  
Reply
Old 05-19-05 | 10:49 PM
  #8  
Thylacine's Avatar
Industry Maven
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 2,936
Likes: 0
From: Wherever good bikes are sold

Bikes: Thylacines...only Thylacines.

Thylacine is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 12:03 AM
  #9  
djbrod's Avatar
Insomniac
 
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 412
Likes: 0
From: Alabama

Bikes: 2004 Scattante R650, IRO Mark V, TST /w 2005 Camp. Centaur(RIP thanks to an F150), Specialized E5 TT bike

I just made the move from Al to Ti. I don't notice a difference in ride quality when I'm in the city. I notice a big difference when I'm out in the county on the chip sealed roads that haven't been maintained for years.

I only have ~200 miles on the Ti with a longest ride of ~50 miles. I'll probably put 80 miles in this week end. At that distance I can feel a difference in overall fatigue after the ride. I'm not talking about just being tired from the ride, but my joints don't ache and I'm more willing to get back on the bike the day after a long ride.

Is it the Ti? Is it the new bike smell? Only time will tell.
djbrod is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 03:11 AM
  #10  
Senior Member
 
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 568
Likes: 0
From: Melbourne in Australia

Bikes: Old 12-speed commuter, When I earn enough I'll get a fixed KHS flite 100

Originally Posted by Trogon
Buy a ti bike because you like the way they look.
He's right. Its all about the look. Frames are all so light these days, and ride quality can be adjusted with a million other components, that people pay for the decals, shininess etc.
I might be wrong, so don't take my word for it.
lisitsa is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 03:43 AM
  #11  
classic1's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,022
Likes: 5
I've found the ride quality of aluminium is not as good as my Ti bike.

Of course, I must qualify this statement as I've only ever ridden an empty aluminium coke can. It's lack of wheels, cranks etc, may have flavoured my rather negative view of the material. I must say though, the fatigue life was exceptionally poor.

Seriously, I have a Litespeed and I love it. Just make sure whatever you get fits.

Last edited by classic1; 05-20-05 at 03:51 AM.
classic1 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 04:09 AM
  #12  
roadwarrior's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2002
Posts: 10,664
Likes: 7
From: Someplace trying to figure it out

Bikes: Cannondale EVO, CAAD9, Giant cross bike.

While I understand that this matters not to the folks that ride for fun, 30-40-50 miles at a pop...given that there are several manufacturers that support pro cycling that also make titanium bikes, who in the pro peloton rides titanium?
Last one I could come up with was last year's Sierra Nevada team that rode Serotta Legend titanium frames.

With weight, power transfer, and comfort paramount to being successful on a bike that you ride for six hours a day, I'd think that the best riders in the world would want to ride what appears to be the best frame material going. No?

Why not?

More info and maybe a few answers

Last edited by roadwarrior; 05-20-05 at 04:29 AM.
roadwarrior is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 04:18 AM
  #13  
53-11_alltheway's Avatar
"Great One"
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 4,463
Likes: 0
From: Might as well be underwater because I make less drag than a torpedoE (no aero bars here though)
I don't think it's material so much as the engineering/design that goes into the product. Even poorly designed unobtanium would make for a bad frame.




Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH
i think what Trogon is saying above is true given a nicely paved surface. If your riding brings you on roads that are less than perfect then Ti beats Al in every single ride category (feel, comfort, life, power transfer) >> although high end Eddy Merkxx Al feels close to Lightspeed Ti.

The strength of good Ti frames lies in its welds and right amount of flex.

**weak: Ti has the 'soul' you are looking for. people love their Ti & CF & steel bikes. I've yet to find the unique love affair with Al that the owners of other materials boast about.
People buy on Emotion, not because something is better. I find this be very true in the cycling world where Brand labels and graphics matter as much as anything else.

I don't see anything magical about titanium. I've ridden a Litespeed solano, what's the big deal about? My opinion these days is that Titanium's appeal is not based on it's ultility, but rather it's exotic status.

Last edited by 53-11_alltheway; 05-20-05 at 04:29 AM.
53-11_alltheway is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 04:28 AM
  #14  
RiPHRaPH's Avatar
Don't Believe the Hype
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,668
Likes: 0
From: chicagoland area

Bikes: 1999 Steelman SR525, 2002 Lightspeed Ultimate, 1988 Trek 830, 2008 Scott Addict

Originally Posted by sydney
Gimmie a break! Where does this stuff get dredged up from?
Sydney: you just keep believing that. It gets dredged up from people who have riden thousands of miles on each material. Do I need to spend $$$ on CF seatposts, rails, fork, etc on a non-Al bike to smooth out the ride? you can answer that. We are talking about all things equal, right?

I have nothing against Al. Given a 3K budget, i doubt many would choose a Al material. And if you hug your Al bike and love it then i apologize for the lack of soul comment. I just don't see it.

53-11 altheway rode a medium level Ti bike from a high end bike manufacturer and didn't see the difference.

Again, to answer the original question. We have a guy who is looking for a soulful, fast & comfortable ride from an upgrade of his current $1200 Al bike. I take that as someone who is looking for a $2.5K or more ride that inspires him to ride more and with more confidence than he did before. I think the answers here are all valid. If you have ridden on the potholed & beat up roads of the upper midwest and think that Al frames without highend CF in the right places is as smooth a ride as Ti then good luck to you. I've been on this forum long enough to argue the ride of differing materials.

But he needs to know. I'll say high end Eddie Merkyx Al is a nice ride.

Last edited by RiPHRaPH; 05-20-05 at 06:30 AM.
RiPHRaPH is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 04:33 AM
  #15  
roadwarrior's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2002
Posts: 10,664
Likes: 7
From: Someplace trying to figure it out

Bikes: Cannondale EVO, CAAD9, Giant cross bike.

Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH
Sydney: you just keep believing that. It gets dredged up from people who have riden thousands of miles on each material. Do I need to spend $$$ on CF seatposts, rails, fork, etc on a non-Al bike to smooth out the ride? you can answer that.
Oh, really?

BTW..you mentioned the "right amount of flex"....the only way you are getting that is if the tubing was hand selected for you and measured as such by a qualified builder...because if I have two guys the same height who, in theory would ride the same size bike (given the particulars of their body styles) but one guy was 50 pounds heavier than the other, who has the "right amount of flex"? The light guy or the heavy guy?

this is more about "what I ride is best"...I sell titanium. If I get someone who just HAS to spend more money for a bike, "cash or credit?"...

BTW2...titanium is just like carbon and aluminum...not all of it is created equal. Having ridden a Litespeed and a Serotta, no comparison. Both are nice bikes, like a Ford and a Ferarri are both nice cars.

Last edited by roadwarrior; 05-20-05 at 04:41 AM.
roadwarrior is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 04:38 AM
  #16  
53-11_alltheway's Avatar
"Great One"
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 4,463
Likes: 0
From: Might as well be underwater because I make less drag than a torpedoE (no aero bars here though)
Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH
Sydney: you just keep believing that. It gets dredged up from people who have riden thousands of miles on each material. Do I need to spend $$$ on CF seatposts, rails, fork, etc on a non-Al bike to smooth out the ride? you can answer that. We are talking about all things equal, right?

I have nothing against Al. Given a 3K budget, i doubt many would choose a Al material. And if you hug your Al bike and love it then i apologize for the lack of soul comment. I just don't see it.
I should have test ridden a Vortex. Hopefully that does better than a Solano for power transfer.

Like I said, the design is more important than the material. You have to compare apples to apples.

Will Ti designed to equal the power transfer of a stiff aluminum frame have better ride quality?
53-11_alltheway is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 04:45 AM
  #17  
53-11_alltheway's Avatar
"Great One"
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 4,463
Likes: 0
From: Might as well be underwater because I make less drag than a torpedoE (no aero bars here though)
Originally Posted by roadwarrior
Oh, really?

BTW..you mentioned the "right amount of flex"....the only way you are getting that is if the tubing was hand selected for you and measured as such by a qualified builder...because if I have two guys the same height who, in theory would ride the same size bike (given the particulars of their body styles) but one guy was 50 pounds heavier than the other, who has the "right amount of flex"? The light guy or the heavy guy?

this is more about "what I ride is best"...I sell titanium. If I get someone who just HAS to spend more money for a bike, "cash or credit?"...

BTW2...titanium is just like carbon and aluminum...not all of it is created equal. Having ridden a Litespeed and a Serotta, no comparison. Both are nice bikes, like a Ford and a Ferarri are both nice cars.
Exactly, what is stiff for one guy is flexy for another. The ride can be "tuned" however the builder decides by the diameter and guage of the tubing etc.

If someone can show that "properly selected" Ti transfers power like stiff Aluminum, but rides better I'll believe in the "magical " qualities of unobtanium.

EDIT: The only reason I might like really stiff Ti is becasue it might be lighter than equally stiff Aluminum and possibly have a longer fatigue life (since Ti has a fatigue limit like steel, no?)

Heck, Click on my sig under frame fatigue tests. All the Cannondale CAAD frames pass the EFBe test under the maximum load (291 lbs to the pedals 100,000 times). How much fatigue life do you need?

To me a "comfort flex" Ti bike is like a "comfort flex" steel bike only it may be more light weight and it can't rust. ( I could be wrong about this, correct me if I'm wrong)

Last edited by 53-11_alltheway; 05-20-05 at 05:16 AM.
53-11_alltheway is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 06:38 AM
  #18  
RiPHRaPH's Avatar
Don't Believe the Hype
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,668
Likes: 0
From: chicagoland area

Bikes: 1999 Steelman SR525, 2002 Lightspeed Ultimate, 1988 Trek 830, 2008 Scott Addict

Now I ride a Lightspeed Ultimate, with the 6/4 & 3/2 Ti tubing. I find it stiffer than my buddy's lightspeed classic. But that is on a 59cm framset.

Roadwarrior: there is a difference between someone buying a Legend Ti (outswide the budget of this questioner?!) and completing it with a weight weenie saving CF material and someone who buys a Al bike and NEEDS to buy the road dampening effect of CF (i knew someone would bring that up, good catch)

**BTW: this is all good clean fun. again, if this original questioner is riding on the beat up, potholed roads many of us ride on, the ride characteristics of materials become more apparent.

i really have nothing against Al and would ride a Eddie Merkyx Al frameset anytime.
RiPHRaPH is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 06:45 AM
  #19  
53-11_alltheway's Avatar
"Great One"
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 4,463
Likes: 0
From: Might as well be underwater because I make less drag than a torpedoE (no aero bars here though)
Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH
Now I ride a Lightspeed Ultimate, with the 6/4 & 3/2 Ti tubing. I find it stiffer than my buddy's lightspeed classic. But that is on a 59cm framset.

Roadwarrior: there is a difference between someone buying a Legend Ti (outswide the budget of this questioner?!) and completing it with a weight weenie saving CF material and someone who buys a Al bike and NEEDS to buy the road dampening effect of CF (i knew someone would bring that up, good catch)

**BTW: this is all good clean fun. again, if this original questioner is riding on the beat up, potholed roads many of us ride on, the ride characteristics of materials become more apparent.
Riphraph, if the bike is stiff it shouldn't matter whether it is made out of Ti or aluminum. A stiff bike is a stiff bike. They both are going to ride hard.

If you want a frame with some flex in the tubing you'll have to go with a material with a fatigue limit. You can't do this with aluminum. To me that is the main difference.

I'll go ride a Vortex next I think. (litespeed's high performnace bike)

Last edited by 53-11_alltheway; 05-20-05 at 06:56 AM.
53-11_alltheway is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 06:55 AM
  #20  
sydney's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 9,428
Likes: 2
Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH

i really have nothing against Al and would ride a Eddie Merkyx Al frameset anytime.
Oh really? You have actually ridden some? Which model? What makes Eddys so special?
sydney is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 07:14 AM
  #21  
RiPHRaPH's Avatar
Don't Believe the Hype
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 2,668
Likes: 0
From: chicagoland area

Bikes: 1999 Steelman SR525, 2002 Lightspeed Ultimate, 1988 Trek 830, 2008 Scott Addict

i have riden a c'dale CAAD4 for extended miles. the eddy seems to be oversized in all the right places, the difference probably came in the more aggressive angles from a racing type framset.
RiPHRaPH is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 07:38 AM
  #22  
sydney's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 9,428
Likes: 2
Originally Posted by RiPHRaPH
i have riden a c'dale CAAD4 for extended miles. the eddy seems to be oversized in all the right places, the difference probably came in the more aggressive angles from a racing type framset.
<takes leave to look for BS filter,hip boots and shovel>
sydney is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 08:00 AM
  #23  
classic1's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,022
Likes: 5
Originally Posted by roadwarrior

With weight, power transfer, and comfort paramount to being successful on a bike that you ride for six hours a day, I'd think that the best riders in the world would want to ride what appears to be the best frame material going. No?

Why not?

More info and maybe a few answers
roadwarrior - fantastic link if you are considering having a hip replacement, are into Greek mythology or are building the starship Enterprise.

I may be wrong, but you appear to be asking a rhetorical question.

The question is 'why not?'. Cost, difficult of working with Ti, pros ridin' what they are given coz they ain't payin', Hein Verbruggens share interests in Taiwanese alumuminum frame manufactuering....can you elaborate.
classic1 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 08:01 AM
  #24  
classic1's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 5,022
Likes: 5
Originally Posted by sydney
<takes leave to look for BS filter,hip boots and shovel>
Is the shovel Ti, aluminium, or steel?

No way am I asking what material the boots are made of.
classic1 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-20-05 | 08:03 AM
  #25  
Thread Starter
Junior Member
 
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 23
Likes: 0
If it helps any of you I'm looking to stay around $4k which I figure gets me about as good as there is. The mixed reactions are a little confusing so I'm looking to clarify things before I proceed. I like the idea of getting a bike that's a little different but I don't have so much money that I willing to throw away $1000 just to be different. If there is a $2500 bike that is just as good as a $4000 bike I'm gonna go the cheaper route. I've heard a lot of comments similar to the ones posted here so I'm trying to make an educated decision. I know anything I get is going to ride better than what I have. I would like to get a bike that is going to last me a while. I'm the type of person who will save up for exactly what I want and will get something that last forever. I don't buy a car and then drive it for 2-3 years and get something new. I've never owned a car for less than 6.5 yrs. I currently ride around 100 miles a week sadly most of it is on a trainer because I have a 2 year old son and I won't go exercise until he goes to bed a night. I relish the weekends and being able to get on the road for a couple of hours. For what its worth I'm not sold on any frame material or manufacturer but I would like to have something that is not a me to bike like a middle of the road trek.
weak is offline  
Reply


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.