Been thinking about this...
Shimming a frame with a proper shim, 100mm long, and a smaller diameter post, will induce more flex of the post itself, but will this be beneficial or detremental to the life of the frame's seat tube/seat clamp area?
I'm thinking of arguments for both as the flex will absorb impact throughout it's flex, rather than transmit it directly and rigidly to the frame, but then again is the flex acting like a lever on the frame??
An example being Lynskey used to have problems with their seat tubes cracking on 31.6mm post fitments, then they shimmed their seat tubes down to 27.2mm (still 35mm OD frame) with less failures. So smaller seatpost ID, less stress at the seat tube??
What do you guys think? Any absolute engineering facts? Any experiences?
Shimming a frame with a proper shim, 100mm long, and a smaller diameter post, will induce more flex of the post itself, but will this be beneficial or detremental to the life of the frame's seat tube/seat clamp area?
I'm thinking of arguments for both as the flex will absorb impact throughout it's flex, rather than transmit it directly and rigidly to the frame, but then again is the flex acting like a lever on the frame??
An example being Lynskey used to have problems with their seat tubes cracking on 31.6mm post fitments, then they shimmed their seat tubes down to 27.2mm (still 35mm OD frame) with less failures. So smaller seatpost ID, less stress at the seat tube??
What do you guys think? Any absolute engineering facts? Any experiences?