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Benefits of carbon stem


The Ouzo

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Its my first piece of carbon. I didnt get it buy choice though. I went to the LBS for a basic bike setup and they found my stem was to long, they swapped it for the only stem of the correct length they had in the shop which happened to be a carbon stem.

 

So is their any advantage to a carbon stem vs standard steel ? (besides the few milligrams in weight)

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Looks nice. Some aluminium stems are lighter. Which one did they fit? Some are aluminium with a carbon wrap.

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Looks nice. Some aluminium stems are lighter. Which one did they fit? Some are aluminium with a carbon wrap.

Pazzaz, like so. not sure if its the same model, but it looks the same.

I see now its actually ally + carbon.

http://www.pazzaz.com/image/product/bike/stem/ras23fcb.jpg

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Carbon has better damping properties than steel or the alloy

 

Yip, and aesthethic value.

Are you bars also carbon?

Edited by ' Dale
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Carbon stems are a waste of money.

 

They're marginally lighter than aluminium (sometimes heavier). They're far more expensive and the vibration damping effect is a myth.

 

In my opinion aluminium is the best cost to weight to performance material for stems, bars and seat posts.

 

Carbon's only purpose is to make a bike blinger. Nothing wrong with that - blings rocks!

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Yip, and aesthethic value.

Are you bars also carbon?

its my only piece of "carbon"

 

and on the dampening, I think Eldron is right, I did not notice a difference, actually it may have been slightly worse with the new stem.

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Carbon stems are a waste of money.

 

They're marginally lighter than aluminium (sometimes heavier). They're far more expensive and the vibration damping effect is a myth.

 

In my opinion aluminium is the best cost to weight to performance material for stems, bars and seat posts.

 

Carbon's only purpose is to make a bike blinger. Nothing wrong with that - blings rocks!

 

Agree with Eldron.

I had Pazzaz Carbon Stem, Bar and Seatpost on my previous bike. Looks good, lasts well and is good value for money. Stem is unfortunately alu with carbon wrap. Quite heavy.

On my current bike I have KCNC Stem and Bar. A lot ligther and also cheaper than carbon / carbon wrapped items.

Edited by Wannabe
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steel

 

Steel hasn't been used for stems in the last 10 years or so! It's all aluminium, carbon or (rarely) ti.

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152g is pretty heavy though... Ritchey WCS allot stems are around 125g, with ones like KCNC even less.

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Never ever will I use a carbon bar or stem....I seen before where those things snapped and it is not good....Imagine now while racing deciding to sprint "poof" there your stem snaps or your handlebar snaps taking a nice dip in the tar at 50km/h+....no thank you! Even sometimes if the roadbike just falls over the carbon bar can crack, I seen it happen at an event, the guy fell over and the bar broke off....

 

Carbon frame does the job, I run a Ritchey WCS Logic stem and Handlebar, it is light, minimal flex and atleast I don't have to worry about it breaking off....

 

So besides the cool looks of a carbon stem....that is about it....

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152g is pretty heavy though... Ritchey WCS allot stems are around 125g, with ones like KCNC even less.

I weigh 85kg, an empty bladder will make up the weight difference, doesnt bother me.

 

I wonder what the standard Scott stem weighed in at.

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A possibly superfluous bit of info but there still seems to be some confusion about the word "alloy".

 

Alloy just means a combination of two or more elements - it has nothing to do with actual aluminium. Titanium is an alloy - so is steel and aluminium.

 

In cycling terms the most common "alloy" is aluminium. Aluminium is mixed with a few otyher elements to make it stronger and more heat treatable. That said - aluminium (the element) still accounts for ~97%+ of the aluminium alloy.

 

Here endeth the metallurgy lesson ;-)

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Have a look at the Ritchey WCS 260 stems.

 

My favourite stem/bar/seat pillar manufacturers are Pro's PLT series (road), Pro's Karyak series (mtb) and Ritchey's WCS aluminium series (mtb and road).

 

Both provide superb balance of cash, weight, performance and looks.

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A possibly superfluous bit of info but there still seems to be some confusion about the word "alloy".

 

Alloy just means a combination of two or more elements - it has nothing to do with actual aluminium. Titanium is an alloy - so is steel and aluminium.

 

In cycling terms the most common "alloy" is aluminium. Aluminium is mixed with a few otyher elements to make it stronger and more heat treatable. That said - aluminium (the element) still accounts for ~97%+ of the aluminium alloy.

 

Here endeth the metallurgy lesson ;-)

Now you've gone and spoilt my fun. Lots of people ask me for alloy nipples and I give them brass with a straight face.

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