From: "Jim Merz" <jmerz@schat.com>
To: <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2008 13:56:13 -0700
Thread-Index: AckvBowZX5G+f0t8QBupL/kCkCDzbwAAWS2A
Subject: [CR]Luged Ti frames
Subject: Luged Ti frames
Back when I was building frames in Portland I ran Into Pino Morroni. He used
to visit Portland as he had a crush on a young female national track
champion Kathy Eckroth. He gave one of the very few Pino Ti luged frames to
her to race. Berringer did the brazing, he was the world expert on brazing.
I asked Berringer how he did it and he would not tell me. It turns out the
early Ti tubing was made in Albany Oregon, I think the company was called
Oregon Metallurgical. I went there and met the guy that did the tubing for
Pino. It was a big buck project and as I remember Bianchi paid for it. The
stays were even tapered. Anyway, they did not know how to braze Ti so I kept
checking around. I ended up at the U.S. Bureau of Mines, Albany Research
Center http://www.netl.doe.gov/about/arc_history.htmlhttp://www.netl.doe.gov/about/arc_history.html and somehow the head of the
lab liked me or something. Anyway he spent a whole day showing me this
amazing place. They had basically developed all the technology for Zirconium
production in the USA, used for reactors and atom bombs. But Titanium is
very similar and they did the work on it also. He showed me a 3 speed bike
they made in the 1950's using Ti for the frame, I am sure the first one
ever. Anyway, he looked into the brazing and came back with a gold based
alloy and it had to be done in a vacuum. All this was way out of my limited
resources at the time. I did make some parts from Ti in the 1970's, I had
friends working at Precision Cast Parts. They made aircraft engine parts
from Ti and I got some "G" job work done for me.