ForMatter/Applications/Bicycle frame
app_bike_frame

Bicycle frame

Tubular structure connecting wheels, bottom bracket, headtube, and seat. Loaded in fatigue more than any other consumer product.

mechanical

  • high stiffness-to-weight
  • fatigue resistance
  • impact tolerance

environmental

  • weather-resistant
  • UV-stable for paint
  • salt-tolerant

regulatory

  • ISO 4210
Tim Minshall (living — quote)

As with most bikes of this type, the frame is made from a set of welded aluminium tubes. The spoked wheel rims are pressed from aluminium, and the gears and brakes have been bought by the bike company pre-assembled from a specialised manufacturer (in this case the Shimano Corporation of Japan). Various other bits — mudguards, lights, seat — are bought in from other dedicated suppliers.

Minshall, *Your Life Is Manufactured: How We Make Things, Why It Matters and How We Can Do It Better* (Faber, 2025), Chapter 3 'Move,' on the bill-of-materials of a commuter bicycle. The frame is the only structural part the bike company itself fabricates — the welded-aluminium tubes (most likely 6063 or 6061) — while the wheels, gears, brakes, mudguards, lights, and seat all come from specialised suppliers (Shimano named explicitly). Pairs against the twenty-thousand-kilometre logistics quote on mat_aluminum_6063 — same scene, different angle: 6063 names the alloy that travels, app_bike_frame names the assembly that travels. Tim Minshall is the inaugural Dr John C. Taylor Professor of Innovation at the University of Cambridge and Head of the Institute for Manufacturing.

Citations

  • standard · ISO 4210 — Cycles. Safety requirements for bicycles.
  • book · Minshall, *Your Life Is Manufactured* (Faber, 2025), Chapter 3 'Move' — twenty-thousand-kilometre journey of a commuter bicycle.