Canyon Alert
#1
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Canyon Alert
Canyon has asked owners of their new Aeroad CF SLX and CF aero road bikes to stop riding them following an incident at Le Samyn when a portion of Mathieu van der Poel’s handelbar broke and fell off during the race. Full article here: https://www.velonews.com/gear/road-g...lebar-incident. Interesting given the recent discussions of integrated stem/handlebar set ups.
#2
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Crap engineering team. A seatpost design that self destructs and handlebars that snap under heavy load. Nice.
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Just bring it in to your nearest Canyon dealer...
Oh...wait...
Oh...wait...
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#6
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Well, I bought a Canyon Endurace SL 8.0 last Spring. Although I love the bike in general, it came with one of their integrated cockpit set ups that was a nuisance from the get go. For one thing, it was near impossible to find a compatible mount for my Garmin 1030. The one I could find put the Edge in a less than optimal position. I managed to kluge together a mount that worked better but looked gawd-awful ugly, but then a few months later while replacing the bar tape, I discovered the left side of the HB was fractured just under the brake/shifter clamp. The tape and clamp were enough to hold things together tightly enough that the flex wasn't noticeable until I striped things down. Long story short, I opted to go with a standard handlebar and separate stem since I wanted a shorter stem anyway. No further issues since then, but it did put a dent in my opinion of "German" engineering.
This latest faux pas had done nothing to reassure me.
This latest faux pas had done nothing to reassure me.
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I once had a pair of alloy bars snap off on one side between the brake lever and the stem. In fairness to Cinelli, yes they were their bars, mine were about 30 years and 50,000 miles old. You do not want to experience it. No crash, but quite a surprise. If you have one of those bikes don't ignore the warning.
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#8
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Worth noting, however, that his bars did not break at the adjustable joint, but rather appear to have broken at the brake lever.
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#10
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"it did put a dent in my opinion of "German" engineering."
Interesting statement. Work on German autos or motorcycles long enough and you realize they simply make vehicles like all the rest and there is no "magic" to their engineering. No better, no worse.
Interesting statement. Work on German autos or motorcycles long enough and you realize they simply make vehicles like all the rest and there is no "magic" to their engineering. No better, no worse.
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Send it.
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"Bring" is used when something is being moved to a location, "take" is used to describe movement away from a location. Correct usage would be ""Just bring it in to your nearest Canyon dealer," and "I'm taking my broken handlebar and going home."
tl;dr: cxwrench is entirely correct.
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#16
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When so much innovation and weight reduction is designed into a product that will be worked hard for years, sometimes the mark is missed and things break.
Not excusing Canyon here, but I am surprised issues like this don't happen more frequently.
Incremental gains as a concept is fascinating. Incremental gains as a bike design can quickly become dumb.
Not excusing Canyon here, but I am surprised issues like this don't happen more frequently.
Incremental gains as a concept is fascinating. Incremental gains as a bike design can quickly become dumb.
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I'm not a fan of carbon but this is a case of the team not respecting carbon for what it is. A strong, very light material that doesn't like impacts and can suffer hidden damage. Hitting a car, then racing over cobbles? Nahh. Now the team didn't spend, what?, $100 replacing the bar (plus an hour of two of labor), Canyon is going to step up and replace a pile of handlebars. Probably take a hit on sales as well. (That mechanic might get a quiet talking to next time the Canyon rep is over.)
Edit: The CyclingNews article:
https://www.cyclingnews.com/news/can...#disqus_thread
Last edited by 79pmooney; 03-05-21 at 12:01 AM. Reason: Added the article I got this from
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Any time a new product comes out, there's always a chance for design flaws to get past internal testing and QA. Not just in bikes, but cars, electronics, everything. That something broke during a cobbled pro race is not surprising in the least, regardless of whether a pre-race impact weakened it.
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When I moved into the NOLA area I realized how pervasive the misuse was. As I have tried to help people, some grasped it better this way. Point to where the object will go. If you are pointing away from where you are, use take.
There are some exceptions, but none that would ever make the above wrong.
Bring here. Take away.
https://www.lexico.com/grammar/bring-or-take
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Pedants really need to do their research.
"Bring" is used when something is being moved to a location, "take" is used to describe movement away from a location. Correct usage would be ""Just bring it in to your nearest Canyon dealer," and "I'm taking my broken handlebar and going home."
tl;dr: cxwrench is entirely correct.
"Bring" is used when something is being moved to a location, "take" is used to describe movement away from a location. Correct usage would be ""Just bring it in to your nearest Canyon dealer," and "I'm taking my broken handlebar and going home."
tl;dr: cxwrench is entirely correct.
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#22
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Here's a handy rule on when to use bring and take when it involves movement of an object. When the movement of the object is away from you, take is used. When the movement is toward you, bring is used. I am at my house. CXWrench, bring your bike over to my house, and we'll adjust the derailleur. CXWrench, I am a horrible mechanic, so I'd recommend you take your bike the shop for repair.
When I moved into the NOLA area I realized how pervasive the misuse was. As I have tried to help people, some grasped it better this way. Point to where the object will go. If you are pointing away from where you are, use take.
There are some exceptions, but none that would ever make the above wrong.
Bring here. Take away.
https://www.lexico.com/grammar/bring-or-take
When I moved into the NOLA area I realized how pervasive the misuse was. As I have tried to help people, some grasped it better this way. Point to where the object will go. If you are pointing away from where you are, use take.
There are some exceptions, but none that would ever make the above wrong.
Bring here. Take away.
https://www.lexico.com/grammar/bring-or-take
I’ll bet people really appreciate your impromptu grammar lessons. (If you actually teach English grammar for a living, I will remove the snarkiness from that comment.)
For every website showing that your interpretation is correct, I’ll bet I can find one showing that my interpretation is correct. Maybe two. Which is probably why, in common usage, “bring“ and “take“ are usually used interchangeably without any objections. Usually.
Last edited by Koyote; 03-05-21 at 07:30 AM.
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You "bring vs take" people need some perspective.
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You're probably right. Or correct. Whatever.
Back (slightly) on-topic: what is the point of a handlebar with adjustable width? I mean, anyone who's been riding long enough to shell out for a pricey bike probably has a preferred handlebar width, right? And once the bar is wrapped, the width is not easily adjusted. So what is the appeal?
I'm thinking the design is mostly about Canyon not wanting to keep a bunch of different handlebar widths in stock. Or am I missing something?
Back (slightly) on-topic: what is the point of a handlebar with adjustable width? I mean, anyone who's been riding long enough to shell out for a pricey bike probably has a preferred handlebar width, right? And once the bar is wrapped, the width is not easily adjusted. So what is the appeal?
I'm thinking the design is mostly about Canyon not wanting to keep a bunch of different handlebar widths in stock. Or am I missing something?