That is correct. I realize and understand the contradiction. I also suspect the difference in the "season" of wear is not a big amount, cause it would be difficult to quantify, but the feel is there and it's not imagination, this isn't Salem hysteria. These are serious people and that small feel is all that is needed to give pause because of the level of performance. Whether one speeds down the Alps, Rockies, or Sierras at 60mph the riders know. Obviously, regular riding at 15 - 25 mph, and folks who tell me they apply brakes and don't go over 30mph downhill probably are not going to have this experience. But it's the hard riders, as in car racing the competition drivers, who determine the limits for the improvement of product to the general sport and touring public. Testing goes so far, but NASA needs a little help out there, too. All this absolutely good discussion on blades, shape, profile, tube mix, etc., is outstanding to read and mull over, but until it's brazed up and ridden under various loads, speeds, and conditions, we don't really know. We're way ahead of the old timers in that we think it should be such or such but it still has to be ridden. That's why two bikes, put together in sequence by the same builder WILL FEEL AND RIDE ever so differently, and the owner of the matched pair with identical equipment will always have a favorite of the pair. The old track riders 80 years ago said it, and it hasn't changed today. Ted Ernst Palos Verdes Estates, CA
> Ted and list:
>
> I know that in the CO mountains, we had racers, esp some who had been in
> Europe, "test" their frames after a season or so by applying foot pressure
> to the top of six-o'clock-positioned left crank while holding bike firmly
> at handlebars and saddle. They claimed that usage could/would cause the
> frame to go "dead" and thus necessitate its replacement, sometimes with
> the same maker's geometry and frame material.
>
> Flies totally in the face of what I learned in graduate level materials
> science courses, though....
>
> Ken Wehrenberg, Hermann, MO