Author Topic: British professional team glued fake UCI compliance stickers to bikes purchased  (Read 3326 times)

JohnnyRabbit

I prefer these stickers by far  ;D




PLA

The issue is that the stickers were applied during the race and weren't applied at the factory, right?
LET'S MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!

TRUMP FOR PRESIDENT 2024!

MAGA!

Sakizashi

This is the same bike as the AMG Petronas road-bike right? It wouldn't surprise me if LightCarbon helped some other brand get UCI approval for the design, but because of how the process works, that certification belongs to the brand for the specific frame and fork tested. An example is the Cinelli Pressure and Engine 11 road frame, which have UCI approval, but the Raceline Hider and the Top Carbon versions don't.

I know it's a minority view on this forum, but I like seeing brands get their frames approved. To me, it signals that they think their bike is good enough and that they are serious about their product and brand as a player in the sport. Many Chinese brands have their frames approved, including Tavelo, Winspace, Elilee, Seka, Yoeleo, Triaero, Rollingston, Sunpeed, XDS and Pardus. The one frame that stands out on the list, though, is the ICAN FL1 since its under the OEM brand, and I would have assumed they would only seek approval for their Triaero brand.

I don't know if any frame checking happens outside of UCI-level events or the pro fields at nationals. I suspect it doesn't, which is why a team could probably get away with it for as long as they did.

Serge_K

I like seeing brands get their frames approved. To me, it signals that they think their bike is good enough and that they are serious about their product and brand as a player in the sport.

I wonder how much such a certification costs. Given that carbon layup know how and the entire industry is basically in Xiamen now, where any western manufacturer is a very niche, very fringe player, i really think the relevance of a UCI certification is eroding. I can see that an OEM frame would need to be UCI compliant in its measurements (the one aspect of UCI that keeps bikes looking like bikes, unlike triathlon bikes that tend to look like design student wet dreams), but UCI certified...
If i were racing and paying for my frame, or if my team were small, i'd absolutely consider slapping a UCI logo on it if it saves me signficant money, or allows me to buy better / more modern kit for a given budget.
I think enough people on this forum are riding enough bikes hard enough to know that an OEM frame can be raced on. It assumes common sense and caution, like not buying uber light fakes that apparently do break under load, but OEM has nothing to do with fakes.
In fact, if UCI stickers are preventing even one team from being created, or forcing it to shut down, i think it's bad. The world's moved on, and i know enough about the murky world of certifications to be suspicious of it anyway.

Btw, Paul Milder's book "what's wrong with china" talks about certifications in china. Nice book. Poorly made in china, same author, also a nice book.
Fast on the flat. And nowhere else.

jonathanf2

Btw, Paul Milder's book "what's wrong with china" talks about certifications in china. Nice book. Poorly made in china, same author, also a nice book.

I don't read books from fat, balding middle age vanilla dudes who claim to be an authority on anything. Guys like that probably got rejected by the local women.  ::)

Serge_K

I don't read books from fat, balding middle age vanilla dudes who claim to be an authority on anything. Guys like that probably got rejected by the local women.  ::)

Lol. You do you.
Some of my most interesting reads are books from people I disagree with. Understanding other people's perspectives is helpful mental gymnastics at many levels.
Also let's be real, your comment is stupid. he's not writing about dating, I care about his professional experience, not what he looks like.
Fast on the flat. And nowhere else.

patliean1

Some of my most interesting reads are books from people I disagree with. Understanding other people's perspectives is helpful mental gymnastics at many levels.

I've met some amazingly talented and helpful folks within cycling (and life) by taking this approach. Some of which on the surface felt like personal attacks towards me. All it took was a listening ear and then BAM a new long-term friend and resource.

Takiyaki

As always, fuck the UCI.

SilverSteve

My buddy has a LightCarbon LCR0X-D.
Might print a few of these up to put on his bike.

Sakizashi

I wonder how much such a certification costs. Given that carbon layup know how and the entire industry is basically in Xiamen now, where any western manufacturer is a very niche, very fringe player, i really think the relevance of a UCI certification is eroding. I can see that an OEM frame would need to be UCI compliant in its measurements (the one aspect of UCI that keeps bikes looking like bikes, unlike triathlon bikes that tend to look like design student wet dreams), but UCI certified...
If i were racing and paying for my frame, or if my team were small, i'd absolutely consider slapping a UCI logo on it if it saves me signficant money, or allows me to buy better / more modern kit for a given budget.
I think enough people on this forum are riding enough bikes hard enough to know that an OEM frame can be raced on. It assumes common sense and caution, like not buying uber light fakes that apparently do break under load, but OEM has nothing to do with fakes.
In fact, if UCI stickers are preventing even one team from being created, or forcing it to shut down, i think it's bad. The world's moved on, and i know enough about the murky world of certifications to be suspicious of it anyway.

Btw, Paul Milder's book "what's wrong with china" talks about certifications in china. Nice book. Poorly made in china, same author, also a nice book.

For a carbon frame like this, it's about $6000-$7000USD (I think it's actually priced in CHF) + a frame to be destructively tested. However, this is on top of third-party ISO certs, where the big costs would be. Many higher-quality open molds do have ISO tests done by a third party like SGS paid for by the factory now, so seeing a variant on the UCI list is nice because it means those certs have been checked. However, verifying through SGS if I was planning on a commercial relationship would be easy enough.

coffeebreak

"Wuhan Weapon" should become a trending phase on this forum. I quite like it.

Ludo

My buddy has a LightCarbon LCR0X-D.
Might print a few of these up to put on his bike.
Could we replace UCi with chinertown

Serge_K

"Wuhan Weapon" should become a trending phase on this forum. I quite like it.

Wuhan is the town where the P4 lab from which covid leaked is. Xiamen is where carbon bike stuff is made. I'm not sure whether people making these stickers are a bit dim and meant xiamen, or if the covid reference is deliberate. Either way, i think having xiamen weapon would be acknowledging Chinese's hegemony in the carbon bike market, while wuhan weapon is rather cringe.
Fast on the flat. And nowhere else.

neobiker

Wuhan is the town where the P4 lab from which covid leaked is. Xiamen is where carbon bike stuff is made. I'm not sure whether people making these stickers are a bit dim and meant xiamen, or if the covid reference is deliberate. Either way, i think having xiamen weapon would be acknowledging Chinese's hegemony in the carbon bike market, while wuhan weapon is rather cringe.

+1 for Xiamen Weapon

mtm

The UCI approval only covers that the bikes respects the measurements laid out by the UCI regulations. There's no safety testing involved. Costs starts at 5000 CHF I believe. The entire protocol including prices are here:

https://assets.ctfassets.net/761l7gh5x5an/2rAfC3xzdcO3k3KSUOTn6Q/3307965302e74bd65c70790d1274712e/APPROVAL_PROTOCOL_FOR_FRAMESETS.pdf