echolalia wrote:Cycling today and noticed a slight wobble in front wheel. Wheel was fine and tyre not flat. Pedalling away (not on a major road thankfully) the frame creaks then shears. SNAP! Downtube comes apart moves under legs then top tube bends as can't handle weight. So lucky that it happened when it did. Bloke in the bike shop reckons there was perhaps some impact near the lugs to cause a weak point.....
bit of T-cut....?...
'bloke in bike shop' may be correct re impact but any impact could have been weeks months or years ago. If it was severe enough paint will have cracked on the top tube as well, usually just behind the head lug.
But it doesn't need an impact at any time to start a failure of that type; any tiny flaw will do. IME such failures have an element of fatigue to them. Usually a small crack gradually becomes a much larger one as you ride, and the bike starts to wobble furiously; this is nature's way of telling you that something is wrong, and maybe you should climb off and take a look.
It isn't at all unusual to find that the majority of failure in the down tube is such that the parts will fit together quite well; typically only the very last bit that breaks will be plastically deformed. This is a good sign that the crack grew by fatigue. If the crack has been months in the making, it isn't unusual to find that part of the crack surface is corroded; this is probably the oldest part of the crack.
I broke a frame last year in a similar way. Mine did not break in the top tube, because (alarmed by the wobbling) I'd climbed off and spotted the crack before the down tube separated entirely. There was about 1/4" of tube (at the upper surface) that hadn't cracked yet. I strapped up the down tube so that the straps were taking part of the load and tried to carry on (slowly). This lasted a few hundred yards only, but when the DT separated, the top tube didn't bend because the straps took the load at the down tube long enough to allow me to stop. I repaired the frame and I am still riding it.
In my frame there was clearly a place where the crack started (at the bottom where I would be less likely to see it) and that had been there long enough to corrode. I suspect that the demise of the frame (which was decades old, two or three times older than your Orbit) was assisted by the fact that I'd contrived to have a front brake that sometimes juddered badly for a few months. This put some horrible stresses into the frame; enough perhaps to turn a small defect into a crack that would grow in normal service. A loose/rattly headset might have done the same thing.
BTW that looks to be about a 24" frame. If so, that is about as big as I would make a frame in 531C tubing (or comparable) to which any rear load would be attached on a regular basis. Also, Orbit frames of that vintage do seem to be more likely to break than many; maybe they were built in a rush or perhaps were more likely to be overheated during building or something. Some folk also seem to be more like to break frames by wrestling with the handlebars as they ride, and with a rear load on, the repeated twisting load in the frame (which can do the fatigue damage) is greatly increased. In any event that part of the down tube is very highly stressed in a traditional DF, and is arguably one of the most likely to break.
Nothing lasts for ever.... glad you were not hurt.
cheers