Titanium Road Bikes
- cavebear2
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby cavebear2 » Fri Feb 03, 2012 8:09 pm
The cost? All new, parts & components only (I built it) Includes GST and import duties on frame, fork and headset: $5,800
Ride quality is superb and definitely cannot be compared to my compact 2007 Giant TCR-C1. (wheelbase 980mm) The 1st ride on familiar surfaces close to home was a real eye opener!
The frame was manufactured in Russia by people who have long term experience in Ti welding in the Aerospace industry. I believe they produce Colnago's Ti frames.
Oh and all parts are current and fitted perfectly...........
- Le Velo
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Le Velo » Fri Feb 03, 2012 10:33 pm
Cavebar, what difference is noticeable from carbon to TI? Mine is being built at the moment and am yet to find out and very excited at the same time .....cavebear2 wrote:My recently built Burls Ti road bike weighs in at 8.3kg. (includes computer and bidon holders, double handlebar tape & gel inserts) Ultegra 6700 groupo, TWE clincher wheels 1350gms, Pedals Time RXS, Saddle Brooks Swift Ti, Forks Easton EC90SL. The frame was specified oversize by me to give a long head tube (19cm) longer chain stay (415mm) and longer seat stay to increase the wheelbase length to 1020mm for comfort on long rides.
Ride quality is superb and definitely cannot be compared to my compact 2007 Giant TCR-C1. (wheelbase 980mm) The 1st ride on familiar surfaces close to home was a real eye opener!
The frame was manufactured in Russia by people who have long term experience in Ti welding in the Aerospace industry. I believe they produce Colnago's Ti frames.
Oh and all parts are current and fitted perfectly...........
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Titanium Road Bikes
Postby gabrielle260 » Fri Feb 03, 2012 11:11 pm
Why Ti?
1. I've always lusted for a Ti bike.
2. I wanted custom built and the options for carbon fibre custom built frames were poor and are now still only a little better.
3. Around the time I was looking to buy, I rode with a state level rider who reached down to the top tube of his sponsored CF frame and pushed it in with his thumb. He then told me this wasn't unusual after 20,000+ kms of hard racing and training.
4. Soon after getting the Baum, I was riding with the bunch at Ocean Grove and Cadel joined us. He told the 2 of us riding Ti bikes that he really liked them and that was enough validation of my decision!!!
OK - to answer your first question, I first saw Baum frames at a bike expo in Melbourne and was really impressed with the weld quality. They had been getting rave reviews in every magazine and web review site I could find. I had not heard of any dissatisfied customers. Steve Hogg recommends them. I can go on but I'm sure you get the idea.
One other thing - my Baum is the 4th or 5th custom frame I've had. The others have been Cro-moly and aluminum but I have learned more each time.
Oh, yes, in case you were wondering - I've been riding seriously for 24 years - racing road and MTB, riding Audax and ultra distance here and in the US, coaching and being coached - so I've been around! (some might call me an old fart!)
- Le Velo
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Le Velo » Sat Feb 04, 2012 11:30 am
- RonK
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Titanium Road Bikes
Postby RonK » Sat Feb 04, 2012 12:30 pm
So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon.Le Velo wrote:And Phil Ligget himself rides a BAum too
- MichaelB
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby MichaelB » Sat Feb 04, 2012 12:53 pm
Any proof to that ?RonK wrote:So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon.Le Velo wrote:And Phil Ligget himself rides a BAum too
- sumgy
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby sumgy » Sat Feb 04, 2012 1:22 pm
I think it is in his book.MichaelB wrote:Any proof to that ?RonK wrote:So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon.Le Velo wrote:And Phil Ligget himself rides a BAum too
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Titanium Road Bikes
Postby gabrielle260 » Sat Feb 04, 2012 1:40 pm
- Comedian
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Comedian » Sat Feb 04, 2012 1:44 pm
- Le Velo
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Le Velo » Sat Feb 04, 2012 2:28 pm
Comedian you can get the Baum to be lighter than that ...... check this one out http://www.cyclingtips.com.au/2011/11/b ... -corretto/ , 6.6kg and with the pedals !Comedian wrote:Interestingly I weighed a TCR Advanced SL (Durace, ISP, and Giant carbon dish wheels) this morning and it was 6.8 bare. That makes the Baums that are leaving the shop at 7.3kg with pedals look pretty good. There is not a lot in it on weight... at least with Baum.
I think the majority of people think that a titanium bike will be as heavy as steel for some reason
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby RonK » Sat Feb 04, 2012 2:44 pm
Cadel Evans: Close to Flying p.p 246-247.MichaelB wrote:Any proof to that ?RonK wrote:So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon.Le Velo wrote:And Phil Ligget himself rides a BAum too
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby chewsta » Sat Feb 04, 2012 10:41 pm
That's a bike to lust for.. Those lightweights bring the weight down considerably thoughLe Velo wrote:Comedian you can get the Baum to be lighter than that ...... check this one out http://www.cyclingtips.com.au/2011/11/b ... -corretto/ , 6.6kg and with the pedals !Comedian wrote:Interestingly I weighed a TCR Advanced SL (Durace, ISP, and Giant carbon dish wheels) this morning and it was 6.8 bare. That makes the Baums that are leaving the shop at 7.3kg with pedals look pretty good. There is not a lot in it on weight... at least with Baum.
I think the majority of people think that a titanium bike will be as heavy as steel for some reason
- cavebear2
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby cavebear2 » Sat Feb 04, 2012 10:51 pm
Of course my Ti frame would undoubtedly be larger than an equivalent sized Baum based on seat tube size. Also I chose Ultegra 6700 not Campag as I didn't want to buy a new set of tools or spend mega $$'s. Weight wise I don't race and place more importance on comfort which means customised geometry & a larger frame. The weld quality of the Burls & the ride quality speak for themselves and for $5800 I'm
- bosvit
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby bosvit » Sat Feb 04, 2012 11:09 pm
The bike they refer to is the one on the cover.MichaelB wrote:Any proof to that ?RonK wrote:So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon.Le Velo wrote:And Phil Ligget himself rides a BAum too
He didn't race it. He just used it for training when in Australia because Canyon were not available here, which is why it was white and had no stickers on it.
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby ausrandoman » Sun Feb 05, 2012 10:07 pm
Last year, I discussed prices with Baum. For what they would charge, I bought a van Nicholas (mostly Ultegra) and a custom-made Ti bike (mostly a mixture of Dura-Ace and Ultegra) and had enough money left over that I could have flown to England to pick up my custom-made bike from the shop, if I had wanted to.cavebear2 wrote: ... you can save 000's by not buying a Baum. ...
I'm not going to tell anyone where they should be on the price/performance curve. Baum makes bikes for people who want a Patek Philippe even though a Rolex would be good enough.
- cavebear2
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby cavebear2 » Mon Feb 06, 2012 1:30 am
Edit: with all accessories stripped off, the bike only weighs 8.0kg (with Ultegra 6700 groupo) so it's only 700gms or the equivalent of 1 bidon of water. 200gm of that is probably my slightly larger frame - the result of specifying custom geometry and wheelbase. (when compared to a Ti compact road frame from Burls) So in reality we're down to 0.5kg and you could save 200g by having Dura Ace so then it would be 0.3kg, then I could remove the second layer of bar tape and the gel pads underneath.....not that I'm obsessively rationalising or anything....cavebear2 wrote:If the engine is good enough and the ride is efficient 1kg just isn't going to matter.
I'm just extremely happy with the value, look and performance of my Burls Ti bike.
The TWE wheels probably put it ahead of the Fulcrum wheels shown in the Baum photos
- MichaelB
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby MichaelB » Mon Feb 06, 2012 9:32 am
Thanks, but in reading that, it talks about Team Canyons not being available yet, so when in Aus, go local builders to help him out.RonK wrote:Cadel Evans: Close to Flying p.p 246-247.MichaelB wrote:Any proof to that ?RonK wrote: So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon.
Nothing was said that matched your first quote fully.
- twizzle
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby twizzle » Mon Feb 06, 2012 10:08 am
My understanding was that when he received his first Canyon, they couldn't get the bars low enough to suit his riding position. What gets me was that Baum dropped everything and built him a bike straight away... not that I would have expected anything else (in fact, I would have been disappointed if they hadn't done it!), it just makes me jealous that I'm not famous enough to be a queue-jumper.MichaelB wrote:Thanks, but in reading that, it talks about Team Canyons not being available yet, so when in Aus, go local builders to help him out.RonK wrote:Cadel Evans: Close to Flying p.p 246-247.MichaelB wrote: Any proof to that ?
Nothing was said that matched your first quote fully.
...real cyclists don't have squeaky chains...
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby RonK » Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:40 am
Perhaps you need to read more carefully.MichaelB wrote:Thanks, but in reading that, it talks about Team Canyons not being available yet, so when in Aus, go local builders to help him out.
Nothing was said that matched your first quote fully.
My original statement: "So does Cadel - he disliked the Lotto team bike and had a Baum disguised as a Canyon."
On page 246
But He was already plagued with a problem that was distracting him.
"I can't get low enough at the front" he said about his position on the bike.
The next paragraph explains that the Canyon head tube was higher than Cadel wanted, and that new (Canyon) bikes had to
be made, but they were not available before he resumed training in Australia, so Tescher and Baum were recruited to build training bikes for him.
The last sentence on page 246, continued on page 247, says:
And Darren Baum crafted a titanium frame and painted it Canyon white to ensure the sponsorship investment wasn't put in jeopardy.
- notwal
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby notwal » Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:04 pm
Beautiful bike (Where's the drool emoticon). There's a LOOOOOOOOOTA money there. It could be somewhat lighter again of course if you wanted to get really weight weenie with it.Le Velo wrote:Comedian you can get the Baum to be lighter than that ...... check this one out http://www.cyclingtips.com.au/2011/11/b ... -corretto/ , 6.6kg and with the pedals !Comedian wrote:Interestingly I weighed a TCR Advanced SL (Durace, ISP, and Giant carbon dish wheels) this morning and it was 6.8 bare. That makes the Baums that are leaving the shop at 7.3kg with pedals look pretty good. There is not a lot in it on weight... at least with Baum.
I think the majority of people think that a titanium bike will be as heavy as steel for some reason
I'm afraid I'm in the AXCD sort of market. I don't think they use double butted bicycle tubing. I think it's more like aircraft hydraulic tube but I'm only guessing. I wouldn't be happy unless I was comfortable specifying it to the ^n th degree and I just don't know enough about it.
- Le Velo
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Le Velo » Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:14 pm
Notwal, Baum does use butted tubes on their cubano and corretto modelsnotwal wrote:Beautiful bike. There's a LOOOOOOOOOTA money there. It could be somewhat lighter again of course if you wanted to get really weight weenie with it.Le Velo wrote:Comedian you can get the Baum to be lighter than that ...... check this one out http://www.cyclingtips.com.au/2011/11/b ... -corretto/ , 6.6kg and with the pedals !Comedian wrote:Interestingly I weighed a TCR Advanced SL (Durace, ISP, and Giant carbon dish wheels) this morning and it was 6.8 bare. That makes the Baums that are leaving the shop at 7.3kg with pedals look pretty good. There is not a lot in it on weight... at least with Baum.
I think the majority of people think that a titanium bike will be as heavy as steel for some reason
I'm afraid I'm in the AXCD sort of market. I don't think they use double butted bicycle tubing. I think it's more like aircraft hydraulic tube but I'm only guessing. I wouldn't be happy unless I was comfortable specifying it to the ^n th degree and I just don't know enough about it.
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Kenzo » Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:26 pm
I have not read the book, nor do I have any intention to read it, but how does any of this show Cadel 'preferred' Baum over Canyon.. or BMC for that matter?RonK wrote:The next paragraph explains that the Canyon head tube was higher than Cadel wanted, and that new (Canyon) bikes had to
be made, but they were not available before he resumed training in Australia, so Tescher and Baum were recruited to build training bikes for him.
The last sentence on page 246, continued on page 247, says:And Darren Baum crafted a titanium frame and painted it Canyon white to ensure the sponsorship investment wasn't put in jeopardy.
- notwal
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby notwal » Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:29 pm
Baum I would trust to get it right. For AXCD I would have to get the spec spot on.Le Velo wrote: Notwal, Baum does use butted tubes on their cubano and corretto models
That Corretto has given me a serious case of bike envy . In principle I'm against painting Ti because it doesn't need it for any practical reason and any paint you put on it is just an unnecessary maintenance overhead but I guess if you are happy to pay the sort of money that that bike demands then the occasional factory repaint is just like changing your suit.
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby twizzle » Mon Feb 06, 2012 12:57 pm
No-one has said that in this thread.Kenzo wrote:I have not read the book, nor do I have any intention to read it, but how does any of this show Cadel 'preferred' Baum over Canyon.. or BMC for that matter?RonK wrote:The next paragraph explains that the Canyon head tube was higher than Cadel wanted, and that new (Canyon) bikes had to
be made, but they were not available before he resumed training in Australia, so Tescher and Baum were recruited to build training bikes for him.
The last sentence on page 246, continued on page 247, says:And Darren Baum crafted a titanium frame and painted it Canyon white to ensure the sponsorship investment wasn't put in jeopardy.
...real cyclists don't have squeaky chains...
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Re: Titanium Road Bikes
Postby Kenzo » Mon Feb 06, 2012 1:07 pm
You're right... it is the message I received though... and I believe it was the message intended. If not - then why post the info - and - assert it.twizzle wrote:No-one has said that in this thread.
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