Hambini yes or no?
#26
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No on Hanmbini. Definitely a hard no.
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Let’s look at the issue in the context of the measurement. Let’s just say that you can’t mechanically measure a ±1nm tolerance. Certainly there are ways of measuring a nanometer but they aren’t physical. It’s not like you can get out your nanometer calipers.
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I think he has a point. If you're paying thousands for a frame that costs (according to Hambini) about $80 to make there should never be any issues with the accuracy of the BB and the HT. I think all it would take is for them to make them with the holes a bit undersized and then machine them to the final dimensions at an extra cost per frame of only a few tens of $.
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Exactly, half of this thread is based on misinformation. The OP is wrong about the tolerance (.00001, etc) and some of you are just running with the misinformation. The BB Hambini talks about were so far off that it prevented cranks from spinning properly. He knows what he is talking about.
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#32
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I take a perverse pleasure in Hambini and Luescher Teknik videos. They show an alarming number of clearly visible flaws that don't require an unobtaniumeter to measure.
Watch a few Luescher Teknik videos on bad forks and you'll never look at your carbon fiber forks quite the same way again. Yes, I've taken mine off to give them the stink-eye with a magnifying glass and penny tap. I still can't be sure my carbon fiber bikes won't asplode. I can't figure out the trend toward putting carbon fiber forks on aluminum or steel bikes. Seems like it should be the other way around -- put steel forks on carbon fiber bikes. For that matter, my old Trek 5900 fork does have a steel steerer tube and despite the carbon fiber in the forks, the entire thing feels as heavy as a chromoly steel fork.
Regarding "close enough," assuming slightly off is still safe to ride, sure, it matters to racers. Invariably, what racers have, well heeled consumers want, and, eventually, other consumers expect at bargain prices.
Watch a few Luescher Teknik videos on bad forks and you'll never look at your carbon fiber forks quite the same way again. Yes, I've taken mine off to give them the stink-eye with a magnifying glass and penny tap. I still can't be sure my carbon fiber bikes won't asplode. I can't figure out the trend toward putting carbon fiber forks on aluminum or steel bikes. Seems like it should be the other way around -- put steel forks on carbon fiber bikes. For that matter, my old Trek 5900 fork does have a steel steerer tube and despite the carbon fiber in the forks, the entire thing feels as heavy as a chromoly steel fork.
Regarding "close enough," assuming slightly off is still safe to ride, sure, it matters to racers. Invariably, what racers have, well heeled consumers want, and, eventually, other consumers expect at bargain prices.
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#33
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Hambini is an aerospace engineer that makes videos on the poor engineering and bad science in the cycling industry. It's like if Gordon Ramsey reviewed all the food items on the Burger King menu.
#34
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At the beginning of the video he says that the frame was sent to him because the cranks weren't spinning at all.
Let me ask you all this: if you got a brand new bike and the cranks didn't go around, why would you contact Hambini and not the manufacturer? Did Canyon simply refuse to acknowledge the problem? Could this frame actually have been a factory reject that somehow got into the second hand market? Hambini never says anything about why the frame ended up with him before Canyon had a chance to respond.
More broadly, what does it even mean to judge a whole product line by what seems like a very edge case? Guarantee you that every bicycle manufacturer has let a few lemons out over the years--I would only become concerned when those lemons became acceptableto the company. Here, what would really be worrying to me would be if Canyon had said that the customer's bike here was just fine...and there's no evidence to think that
I like Hambini in general but these ranting videos of his are more about entertainment than anything else
Let me ask you all this: if you got a brand new bike and the cranks didn't go around, why would you contact Hambini and not the manufacturer? Did Canyon simply refuse to acknowledge the problem? Could this frame actually have been a factory reject that somehow got into the second hand market? Hambini never says anything about why the frame ended up with him before Canyon had a chance to respond.
More broadly, what does it even mean to judge a whole product line by what seems like a very edge case? Guarantee you that every bicycle manufacturer has let a few lemons out over the years--I would only become concerned when those lemons became acceptableto the company. Here, what would really be worrying to me would be if Canyon had said that the customer's bike here was just fine...and there's no evidence to think that
I like Hambini in general but these ranting videos of his are more about entertainment than anything else
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#35
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When you look at the component brands he recommends many of those are actual manufacturers and those he disses are those that pretty much get their products made for them. Fully controlling the quality process inhouse with your own factory seems to be the main reason they offer better quality. Of course for the end consumer it takes a little bit of research to find out which brands are actual manufacturers and which are really just importers.Companies like Shimano manufacture many of their parts but at entry level prices often use low end factories, I don't believe Canyon scans every frame in fact I believe they are a completely dishonest company who manipulates their customers and never lets the truth get in the way of a sale. There are some German companies based on great engineering and others that piggyback on that reputation who don't merit it and Canyon would be a good example of that.
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#36
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More broadly, what does it even mean to judge a whole product line by what seems like a very edge case? Guarantee you that every bicycle manufacturer has let a few lemons out over the years--I would only become concerned when those lemons became acceptableto the company. Here, what would really be worrying to me would be if Canyon had said that the customer's bike here was just fine...and there's no evidence to think that
I like Hambini in general but these ranting videos of his are more about entertainment than anything else
I like Hambini in general but these ranting videos of his are more about entertainment than anything else
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#37
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Let me ask you all this: if you got a brand new bike and the cranks didn't go around, why would you contact Hambini and not the manufacturer? Did Canyon simply refuse to acknowledge the problem? Could this frame actually have been a factory reject that somehow got into the second hand market? Hambini never says anything about why the frame ended up with him before Canyon had a chance to respond.
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#38
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Wow, there's so many angles to this. First, I'd say that there's no set answer to "Hambini, Yes or No?". He's a young engineer, clearly bright enough, not mature enough to be introspective and charitable to those who've criticized him. Maybe he's trying to become this generation's Jobst Brandt (who was pretty prickly to judge by some of his emails). I'm a fairly well-trained and experienced engineer and I say that if Hambini touches on a subject you're interested in, and you enjoy his videos, get what you can out of them. I'd also say that on any important subject, it might behoove one to not rely on any one source.
Regarding "Quality", it's pretty important to make sure we realize that "Quality" relates to purpose. So if someone trashes a bike frame for being "low quality", what do they mean? If the framebuilder didn't smooth out certain spots on the frame finish, that's low quality if you are concerned with aesthetics. But if that frame is super strong and can handle bashing down a field of talus bearing a "Z"* sized rider, and that's what its marketed for, that same frame could be considered high quality. I think that Campy was able to charge so much for the old Nuovo Record stuff of the 70s was the aesthetics. That was part of their quality. Certainly Sun Tour came up with stuff as mechanically as good as the Campy (in the case of the canted parallelogram, better in terms of function).
Again, I'd watch Hambini, note his observations, and then check with other sources. I think that even if you disagree with him occasionally or think that he's an arrogant twit, there's useful information there, and useful ways of thinking about things.
*Z is Zeppelin sized. As opposed to "D" (dirigible) or "B" (blimp).
Regarding "Quality", it's pretty important to make sure we realize that "Quality" relates to purpose. So if someone trashes a bike frame for being "low quality", what do they mean? If the framebuilder didn't smooth out certain spots on the frame finish, that's low quality if you are concerned with aesthetics. But if that frame is super strong and can handle bashing down a field of talus bearing a "Z"* sized rider, and that's what its marketed for, that same frame could be considered high quality. I think that Campy was able to charge so much for the old Nuovo Record stuff of the 70s was the aesthetics. That was part of their quality. Certainly Sun Tour came up with stuff as mechanically as good as the Campy (in the case of the canted parallelogram, better in terms of function).
Again, I'd watch Hambini, note his observations, and then check with other sources. I think that even if you disagree with him occasionally or think that he's an arrogant twit, there's useful information there, and useful ways of thinking about things.
*Z is Zeppelin sized. As opposed to "D" (dirigible) or "B" (blimp).
#39
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I'd go one further. It would be as if Gordon Ramsey judged Burger King by only the food that customer's threw in the bin. Hambini is not randomly sampling the output of manufacturer X, he's only analyzing those problem cases where the owner felt compelled to send it to him for help.
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#40
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Hambini videos feature frames that have been sent to him because there was a problem discovered or suspected by the original purchaser. AFAIK, he doesn't buy randomly selected samples from bike shops to test. He is critical of the manufacturers represented in general, but it might be best to assume the criticism can at least be assumed to indicate QC departments that let a few 'bad ones' get through.
My experience from working for a company importing bike frames and parts from Asia is that there are two main issues at play - the manufacturing tolerances (which you can specify when ordering parts from manufacturers, but you pay more for tighter tolerances), and the ability of the final seller to catch and remove 'defective' items before they are sold. These two things are related in that you can order parts with looser manufacturing standards, but the percentage of defective parts will be higher. The reverse is also true - you can pay a premium for the Chinese factory to build your parts to tighter tolerances, and that puts the onus on them to catch most of the ones that don't meet the standard (and then they likely sell the 'defective' parts out the back door of the factory unbranded or as counterfeits).
My experience from working for a company importing bike frames and parts from Asia is that there are two main issues at play - the manufacturing tolerances (which you can specify when ordering parts from manufacturers, but you pay more for tighter tolerances), and the ability of the final seller to catch and remove 'defective' items before they are sold. These two things are related in that you can order parts with looser manufacturing standards, but the percentage of defective parts will be higher. The reverse is also true - you can pay a premium for the Chinese factory to build your parts to tighter tolerances, and that puts the onus on them to catch most of the ones that don't meet the standard (and then they likely sell the 'defective' parts out the back door of the factory unbranded or as counterfeits).
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#41
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I'm just going by what TKJava posted. I don't follow nor even know who Hambini is. I'm trying to point out to TKJava that the tolerances he posted are ridiculously tight. If he is error, he needs to check his information. If Hambini did post that kind of tolerance, he is asking for the absurd.
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Plan Epsilon Around Lake Michigan in the era of Covid
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
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Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY Trail
#42
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I'm just going by what TKJava posted. I don't follow nor even know who Hambini is. I'm trying to point out to TKJava that the tolerances he posted are ridiculously tight. If he is error, he needs to check his information. If Hambini did post that kind of tolerance, he is asking for the absurd.

I will openly admit to being a huge Hambini fan. I drink the kool-aid and use one of his Racing bottom brackets. I noticed a big difference. One of the better upgrades for the money.
I doubt he’s making a serious amount of money from his bottom bracket “business”, considering that many of them seem to be out of stock most of the time.
Yes, Hambini deals with the crappiest of each mfg. The best case scenario for a mfg is to never have a frame show up at his door. But the floor should not be this low. It’s fine for the occasional lemon to get manufactured - every process has a yield rate. It’s not OK for it to get past QC. Nope. Not even ONE. Checking these tolerances is easy, quick and probably automatable (if that’s a word). If a company is selling this to a consumer, they are OK selling this subpar crap. Even if 95% of people have 0 issues, how would you feel if you were one of those 5% who paid full price for a high end road bike and got crap?
Last edited by smashndash; 02-24-20 at 09:31 AM.
#43
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fine for the occasional lemon to get manufactured - every process has a yield rate. It’s not OK for it to get past QC. Nope. Not even ONE. Checking these tolerances is easy, quick and probably automatable (if that’s a word). If a company is selling this to a consumer, they are OK selling this subpar crap. Even if 95% of people have 0 issues, how would you feel if you were one of those 5% who paid full price for a high end road bike and got crap?
#44
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I just recently started watching his videos. I have not seen them all, but everything I have seen is logical and makes sense, it's not something that is subject to interpretation. This is also not nitpicking nanometers or manufacturer tolerances, he points out legitimate design flaws on the frames and components that were sent to him for him to troubleshoot that directly caused a problem (through poor design). There was one, I think it was SRAM that had a lip/ledge on the crank so when it was fitted, the lip contacted and applied pressure to the bearings, instead of the bearing race. This significantly interfered with free rotation and accelerated bearing wear.
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Right, because my subjective enjoyment of the bike doesn’t matter at all. I enjoy and notice my BB more than I noticed my upgrade to aero wheels, which cost me far more. Does that necessarily mean it’s saving me more watts? No. I ride my bike to have fun and that is the only measurement that should really matter. This BB rewards me emotionally for smashing on the pedals like my praxis never did. You can call it “religious” as though any sort of subjectivity automatically renders things irrelevant if that makes you feel intelligent.
#47
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I honestly want to know why a customer with a (supposedly) new bike where the cranks would not turn, did not simply ask for a replacement form Canyon.There's got to be more to this story than is coming through in the video
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And what response from Canyon are we talking about here? Did you see one? Did Hambini mention one? As far as the video goes, it sounds like the customer went directly to Hambini and not to Canyon--why? Do you think Hambini is too shy to mention that Canyon didn't want to fix the frame?
I honestly want to know why a customer with a (supposedly) new bike where the cranks would not turn, did not simply ask for a replacement form Canyon.There's got to be more to this story than is coming through in the video
I honestly want to know why a customer with a (supposedly) new bike where the cranks would not turn, did not simply ask for a replacement form Canyon.There's got to be more to this story than is coming through in the video
The frame could also be used or out of warranty. In this case, it seems like the frame was old stock.