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9 comments
Here is an example of catastrophic shear failure in cycling terms taken from a google search
FileItem-102715-image009.jpg
I think the cost angle is significant, Apple tested the material out with the US iPhone4, the SIM release key is made from it, but only for the US market. Manufacturing with it is expensive too from what I've read. I suspect bike frames will come from this, but not until the volume manufacturing can deliver it in affordable amounts. It's probably $100,000 for enough of it to make a frame now... plus the moulds and finishing
The article at Discover Magazine is interesting in that the defence industry is pursuing the possibility of producing ammunition from the process. If its successful we may see it in other manufacturing too. Until then, it is a distant possibility.
I found a longer article at Discover Magazine. Seems there's only two major problems: price and catastrophic shear failure.
Never heard the term before - but it does NOT sound good!
It is not. It is the failure mode of things like glass, cast iron or concrete. Most metals would fail gracefully - bending before they break.
farrell you are living in dreamworld....mind you if it had a gatling gun next time you get squeezed, cut up, generally pissed off "Go ahead punk" whoops wrong film "Hasta la vista baby" except no one gets hurt A Team style... Have I been watching too much telly?
It does mention it under the applications - sport bitty, at the bottom
Liquidmetal potential applications include:
Bicycles
Would be interesting to see a frame build from it
All I can think of when I hear 'liquid metal' is the T-1000 from Terminator 2. If they can bring out a bike that can shape shift at will then I am up for it. You could genuinely have one bike for all purposes. One minute you could be out on a sleek road bike, next minute you can throw it off road as you've changed it into a mountain bike.
Nipping to the shops? Just ride the bike down without any locks, turn it into a battered old bin and then when you come out, have it turned into a Christiana style cargo bike to lug all your shopping home.
Yes, I'd definitely by one of those.