CUSTOM BIKE MAKER USES ALGOR SOFTWARE TO DESIGN
AND ENGINEER CARBON FIBER BICYCLES
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, December 8, 1997 -
Those high performance bicycles speeding along the Olympics route
or the Tour de France are usually custom-made and can cost as
much as $25,000 each. An Ogden, Utah custom bicycle designer is
utilizing Algor software and cutting the cost to less than half.
Mark Enders, of Composite Arts and Science, employs the vacuum
bag technology used to make composite rocket motor cases to craft
carbon fibers and epoxy into customized bike frames which are
more comfortable and more aerodynamic than traditional steel,
aluminum or titanium frames. "With composite materials, we can
tailor the bike frame stiffness so that the bottom bracket area
does not flex laterally and, therefore, more of the energy from
the rider's legs goes into forward motion," explains Enders.
Enders' patented high-performance "beam" bicycles are inexpensive
compared to his high-end competition, with each bike going for
$5,000-6,000 and each tandem for $8,000-12,000.
"Most of the people who buy my bikes are enthusiastic cyclists,
but a few compete," says Enders. "The bikes you buy off the rack
usually come in three sizes: small, medium and large, and not
every body really fits the standard molds. People who buy our
bikes get really excited about having a custom carbon fiber bike
that fits their body size perfectly."
To create a bike to the size and specifications of the customer,
Enders must, in a sense, design and engineer each bike from scratch.
"While not quite as complicated as an airplane, custom designing
a bicycle is similar because it is very engineering-intensive,"
says Enders. "Algor is the ideal software tool for me, because
it has composite design capabilities built into a very powerful
engineering software."
The key engineering challenge in designing a composite bicycle
frame is to determine where and at what angles to place the carbon
material in the body of the frame. Enders designs the frame using
Algor's Superdraw, which has the look and feel of a computer-aided
design program, but produces designs that can be engineered readily
using finite element analysis. Finite element analysis (FEA) breaks
a model into small uniform elements, then tests each of the elements
for how they react to real-world conditions.
After Algor automatically meshes the sculpted surface model of
Enders' design, he uses Algor's FEA composite processors to analyze
how the frame will respond to stress. "Because Algor is so easy
to use, I typically design at least eight lay-up iterations of
each bike frame," says Enders. "Without Algor's speed and ease
of use, the design phase would take much longer, and it would
be next to impossible to optimize the composite materials' ansitropic
properties."
Enders is always striving to design a lighter bicycle, while
retaining high performance and comfort. Using Algor, he has been
able to shave about seven percent off the weight of his tandem
models and is working to take about 15 percent off the weight
of his latest single bicycle frames.
"At this point, it's cost prohibitive to destructively test the
frames. I rely on Algor's accurate results to ensure that my bikes
stand up to the stress of running in the real world," says Enders.
Enders currently sells the bikes in the Ogden, Utah area but
has plans to distribute them nationally in the near future. "It
would have been impractical to start this business without a design
and engineering software tool like Algor that combines high performance,
speed and low cost."
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