Author Topic: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone  (Read 4572 times)

BalticSea

Re: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone
« Reply #15 on: August 29, 2023, 02:08:56 PM »
I have 24mm 7075 alloy axle spindles on all my bikes. I haven't had any issues...yet. The weight savings are very noticeable. All I do is hill climb and go out of saddle quite often. Though I weigh between 68-70kg. I figure at my size, I can get away with a lot of weight weenie hacks that thicc cyclists wouldn't be able to pull off.

What's the realistic weight difference between 24mm steel and alloy spindles? 30, 50, 70 grams? 100 grams?

jonathanf2

Re: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone
« Reply #16 on: August 29, 2023, 05:01:33 PM »
What's the realistic weight difference between 24mm steel and alloy spindles? 30, 50, 70 grams? 100 grams?

Depends on the crankset. The Racework carbon crankset is about 377g and the Goldix/Zeroing crankset w/hollowed out crank arms is about 475-480g. In order to match those weights, you have to go Dura Ace of SRAM Red at a significantly higher cost.

raisinberry777

Re: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone
« Reply #17 on: August 29, 2023, 05:08:07 PM »
What's the realistic weight difference between 24mm steel and alloy spindles? 30, 50, 70 grams? 100 grams?

Comparing the Senicx PR2 and PR3 cranks (the only difference seems to be that the PR3 has a 24mm steel spindle, PR2 has a mm DUB alloy spindle) the difference is about 70-80 grams.

BalticSea

Re: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone
« Reply #18 on: August 30, 2023, 01:49:33 AM »
Depends on the crankset. The Racework carbon crankset is about 377g and the Goldix/Zeroing crankset w/hollowed out crank arms is about 475-480g. In order to match those weights, you have to go Dura Ace of SRAM Red at a significantly higher cost.

I did some digging, found weight for non-Shimano spindles - 160g for steel, 90mm for alloy. 70 grams savings is less than  0.1% of total system weight (typical accuracy of digital scales is 0.1%). Comprimising the durability of one of the highest stress areas for literally meaningless gains is not what I'd recommend.

jonathanf2

Re: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone
« Reply #19 on: August 30, 2023, 11:25:45 AM »
I did some digging, found weight for non-Shimano spindles - 160g for steel, 90mm for alloy. 70 grams savings is less than  0.1% of total system weight (typical accuracy of digital scales is 0.1%). Comprimising the durability of one of the highest stress areas for literally meaningless gains is not what I'd recommend.

The alloy spindle axle 7075 T6 cranksets I received all have manufacturing date stamps, so at least I can keep track of their wear life. They've all held up just fine. Plus I rotate my bike usage to reduce component wear and keep on top of my regular bike maintenance.

sandwich

Re: Newish ZEROING crankset - Ingrid clone
« Reply #20 on: August 30, 2023, 07:40:27 PM »
I think an aluminum spindle is fine in the right application.  Mine would be going on a TT bike which will rarely see loads over 1000w, and minimal mileage all things considered.  I wouldn't use one on a mountain bike or sprinter bike, but even that might be fine with a light rider.