Stuff South Africa

Hipsters can now opt for a recycled plastic bike frame for their eco-friendly rides

If you’re not recycling while you’re cycling, are you really cycling at all? There’s a ‘Yo, dawg’ meme in there somewhere but we’re not about to go looking for it. But seriously, though, how do cyclists get even more eco-friendly? By recycling their bike frames, of course.

Igus, an international plastics specialist with a local division, has come up with a recycled plastic bike frame that should put a few good karma points on your side of the ledger, provided you also remember to recycle it when you’re done.

Bike frame-job

Helge von Fugler, founder and managing director of Advanced with Jan Philipp Hollmann, head of bike components at Igus

As high-end cycling gear goes, the injection-moulded plastic frame isn’t going to spend time under someone wearing a yellow jersey in France. The single-piece frame doesn’t have to muck around with seams or welds but it also weighs in at 3.3kg. If that seems lightweight, you obviously don’t compete in the two-wheeled vehicle space. You’d have to trim a couple of kilos off to match the weight reduction carbon fibre frames provide.

This is fine, since this Igus-made plastic bike frame isn’t intended to spend time on the Tour de France circuit. Igus and Advanced Bikes, a Germany-based e-bike manufacturer, have teamed up for this one, meaning it’ll have an electric motor attached. You’re unlikely to notice the ‘excess’ weight when lithium-ion does all the heavy lifting for you.

The injection moulding method developed by Igus for this bike — the plastics company will make Advanced Bikes’ components for the German outfit — will later be expanded to produce other e-bike components. The eventual aim is to create a wholly recyclable e-bike, as far as possible. It should be doable. Even the batteries should make it through the recycling process and back into a whole new product somewhere down the line.

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