This is intersting..UV light on carbon fiber
#1
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This is intersting..UV light on carbon fiber
i fly fish and tie my own flys..one of the tools we use , is a uv cure epoxy... i was playing around with the UV light on my bake.. and i noticed on some carbon parts like my campagnolo record crankset..nothing happends.. but on some carbon parts it fluoresces.. any thoughts here?
#2
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Some component of the epoxy or clearcoat is UV reactive. Different companies use different products so some fluoresce, some don;t
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Has your dog been near your bike?
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I don't think the UV light is revealing anything about the epoxy in the carbon itself. Bike stuff uses epoxies that cure mostly under heat.
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UV on bare carbon fiber, start @ 10:19
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Carbon fiber bikes are just a part of the throw away society we have now. They are like most things these days, nothing is built to last.
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Presumably, in order to make this claim, you have some data on the percentage of CF bikes that survive X years or X miles and compare unfavorably to bikes made of steel, aluminum, or titanium. If you don't have that data, then you are expressing bias, not facts. And before you start, I have only ever owned steel and Ti frames. My current and previous Ti frames have about 240K accumulated miles between them.
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All equipment has finite lifespan. The problem with carbon fiber, unlike steel, aluminum, or presumably titanium, is that it is almost impossible to recycle once its service life is done.
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Ridiculous, as usual. I fully expect all of my CF bikes to outlast me. Nothing indicates they won't do exactly that.
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Accurate. However, a damaged CF frame is often repairable. Sometimes steel is, too. I'm not sure about Ti. A damaged aluminum frame is on its way to becoming a 12-pack.
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i fly fish and tie my own flys..one of the tools we use , is a uv cure epoxy... i was playing around with the UV light on my bake.. and i noticed on some carbon parts like my campagnolo record crankset..nothing happends.. but on some carbon parts it fluoresces.. any thoughts here?
Obviously, some of your carbon parts are crime scenes.
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That's not "recycling," but more like sweeping the problem under the rug. And doesn't prevent plastic resin microparticles from contaminating the environment.
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People need to watch the video in post #5. The truth here is that the carbon fiber probably is not affected by UV light. It is the epoxy which is a plastic that is affected. Add to the UV the problem is that all plastics get brittle with age.