Hello list,
I'm looking at building a tandem frame in the next few months, and i'd appreciate the input of any list members who have experience with designing and building this style of frame.
My experience as a tandem rider is very limited (i've raced a flexy old gitane on a cx course a few times, but that's about it...), so i'm specifically curious about front end geometry to account for the extended wheelbase as well as tubing selection to account for the heavy load.
My thought would be to use a mix of ox p in mtb weights (8/5/8) for the st and tt, and supertherm (1/7/1) for the dt. The boom tube would be 4130 (.035"? .058"?), but i'm not sure about blades and stays.
Any input would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Michael
chi, il
You may have noticed how tandems in the old days had a too-short rear top tube. The stoker couldn’t stretch out. Made for good aerodynamics (closer “drafting”) and lighter weight, but stokers tend to hate those bad old designs. How much you get to ride the thing depends mostly on how much the stoker likes it. (Rule #1 of tandeming)
Most modern tandems have rear top tubes long enough to at least get close the stoker’s single bike position, despite the rear stem facing back instead of forward. Typically in the 68-75 cm range though some go longer still.
That generally requires larger diameter tubing. I like using a TT that’s larger diameter than the ST, one long tube from HT to stoker ST, piercing it in the middle for the captain’s ST. Whether it’s one tube or two isn’t as important as the large diameter though. 1-3/8” would not be overkill in steel.
Same with the keel tube – big as you can fit. My fave tube was 1-7/8” x .028. Dillsburg had a mill-run of that size but we (me and a couple other FBs, notably Dennis Bushnell) used it up. I think I heard Bushnell commissioned another mill run of the stuff, but he may be keeping it for his own frames. Tubing that large usually isn’t made that thin.
2” x .035 would be a bit heavier but possibly worth it if you can find it. I used it on a couple triplets so I know it has existed at some point but I’m not sure if it is made anymore. 1-3/4” may be the best you can get. 1-1/2” was used in the old days when rear top tubes were short. It can be adequate but it will be on the flexible side. (You can get stiffness with thicker wall, but that is an inefficient way to do it, weight-wise, as I’m sure you know.)
Front end geometry is usually lower trail than singles, to reduce the lean-steer effect. I like the head angle a bit steeper if you have room for it (toe-clip overlap) which of course depends primarily on STA, TT length and how much room you need (crank length, tire diameter, presence of fenders etc)
Consider 650b (ISO 584) or MTB 26” (ISO 559) wheels, they help in some of the tandem-specific design trade-offs, and fatter tires help in keeping the stoker’s butt happy (See Rule #1).
Mark Bulgier
Seattle
I made the last two from Spirit down tubes and a couple seat tubes.. Rodriquez has 700mm oval boom tubes.. all filet of course but very light and strong too…..
Dave
Read back in my blog below (bicycle category) for both builds if you’re looking for cheap help…
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Do your homework about the Ft BB shell. This is where I am not fully decided. I have used set screw, split shell with binders and expanding wedge eccentrics and am not convinced of which I would build with. (And am willing to listen to advice here).
Dillsburg lists 1-3/4" x 0.035":
I haven't found them to be too excited about selling tubing shorter than one length (17-24', usually 18'). Aircraft Spruce, Wicks Aircraft, McMaster Carr and Online Metals don't list it as an option.
alex
Acel tubing. i.e. http://www.aceltube.com
We have all sorts of American produced 4130 seemed and seemless. We currently have 1.75 x .035. I am trying to work on the shopping cart to include tiers for shipping various amounts of straight gauge shipping but if you look under store/cro-moly you will see what we have available and the pricing. Just call or write in for a shipping quote.
We are less expensive than any other option BTW and carry only the sizing typically used in bicycles and bicycle related vehicles.
Dave Bohm
It fits the same size tires as a Pacenti MTB crown.
I'm going to make little plates to fill in the open voids between the "twin plates" and turn it into a box section crown. That should greatly increase the torsional rigidity of the fork crown, and I think that it can be done in an elegant manner if the inserted plates are slightly recessed, leaving the lines of horizontal plates visible. I also plan on reshaping the sides a bit, I'm not a big fan of the 3 windows plus the little florish on the bottom.
I can't say if this is sufficient or not, but it seems like the beefiest easily available option for a crowned fork.
I've had the parts sitting around for months waiting for me to finish this project, maybe it'll happen soon. One downside is that those blades (which are very beefy) don't take the most elegant bend if you use a tight radius fork blade bender. It would be easier to explain in photos, which I can take if there is interest. Nova also makes a lighter weight fork blade for this crown, but I personally feel more comfortable with the beefy one on a tandem.
alex
________________________________________
From: frameb...@googlegroups.com [frameb...@googlegroups.com] on behalf of Michael Catano [shuffl...@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, June 01, 2012 6:44 AM
To: Harold Bielstein
Cc: Mark Bulgier; framebuilders
Subject: Re: [Frame] Tandems and the fabrication thereof
Eric Keller wrote:
It's an awesome utility bike if you can ignore the shouts of "you forgot somebody"
Whenever someone says that to me I reply “Oh thank you, I thought I’d gone deaf!”
Mark Bulgier
Seattle
I don't know of a 28x20 blade that is up for the job.
Colin Bryant wrote:
My experience with pinch bolt eccentric BBs is that they creak under load, vs set screws, which don't move. I've never tried the Bushnell variety.
Really? That’s the first time I’ve heard that. The hundreds of custom tandems I made all had split shells with pinch bolts, and I never heard a creak, or even heard of one second-hand.
The Bushnell device really is clever and cool though, I might be tempted to use one on my next tandem, if there ever is a next one. They came out about at the end of my tandem building career. We used them on the titanium tandems we built at Ti Cycles in the 90s. I was not the primary designer or Ti tandem builder there; that was owner Dave Levy, so I don’t claim those as “tandems I built”. They were perfectly reliable though as far as I know. I’m also friends with some current (or more recently retired from building than I am) tandem builders who use and like them.
I used to go to all the tandem rallies and have ridden with or spoken to probably thousands of tandemists over the last 3-4 decades, and I heard many people dissatisfied with their Cannondale wedge types and their set-screw types. Almost no complaints about pinch bolts or Bushnells.
Mark Bulgier
Seattle