Posted by Tim Stevens on 29/10/2022 17:41:10:
Just a thought – I would be reluctant to use anyone's home-cast risers. The steering controls can be loaded severely whenever a quick swerve (etc) is required (as well as every time the bike falls over). Has any comparitive testing been done to be sure that hone-cast risers are up to scratch?
A further point – the slotted clamp is not as strong as using a pad bolt in a non-slotted hole. Pad bolts are neater too.
A pad bolt is a stud threaded at one end, with a cut-out in the side, towards the other end, to match the radius of the steering tube where it will clamp. Tightening a nut on the thread pulls the radius hard against the fork tube, and pulls the opposite side of t he hole tight, too – so plenty of friction.
Not my idea – used on Vincent front forks 1950 – 56. (but they were not teles).
Regards
Tim Stevens
Hi Tim. I understand your reluctance to consider using home-made items, albeit a little odd in the context of this forum. Unfortunately I don’t share my free body diagrams, hand calcs or numerical checks simply because people aren’t generally interested in such things nor will they understand mesh dependency checks or sensitivity analysis, etc. An experienced design engineer would have noticed the lofted upright designed to distribute the stresses to the lower ring, as well as the curved geometry to drastically improve strength while using less material (improving castbility). This of course all falls apart if you don’t grasp the fundamentals of casting aluminium and you get fade, or gas pickup or casting inclusions due to poor riser and ingate design. Again an experienced foundry-man would notice the lack of casting defects typically evident in the region of the ingate.
The pad-bolt is brilliant and is used extensively in other applications on all my bikes. Specific to the Blackbird uprights; the clamped ‘ring’ is locked in place by a ring clip at the top and located to the bottom yoke by a small tab, so the required gripping force isn’t that great. Incidentally my pattern was symmetric with the LH and RH tabs machined flat respectively.
I’m a firm believer that anybody can do anything with a little reading and just giving it a go! The notion that ‘home made’ is not as good as ‘professional’ is (in my humble opinion) an absolute fallacy.