eelnoraa
Contributor
Gee, I thought I had made a wisecrack when I mentioned something along the lines of "then why not titanium?" Sure, I suppose a relatively thin Ti backplate would be lighter than an equivalently rigid and thicker Al one. But with the difficulty of bending and machining the stuff factored into the retail price, I think it would be way less economical than an Al one. To me, part of the beauty of the BP/W configuration as opposed to a jacket-style BC is that it can be economical. A metal plate--it doesn't get cheaper than that ... unless you start making them out of exotic metals. If you are such a spendthrift gearhead that you'd buy a titanium plate with the idea of using it for airline travel, you probably aren't the type who would balk at the airline's fee for a second bag or could not qualify for the airline's credit card that gets you "free second checked bag."
Me wasn't all that serious either. It is a very stressful life if everything needs to be so precise and serious.
My only experience working with Ti was a home project of making a selfie pole with Ti. It was for fun because I have some Ti tube available. What I found was Ti isn't very good when it is very thin (in diameter). In particular, they are NOT very stiff at all. While Ti may be 2-3x the "strength" to ratio of SS, it is about 1:1 in terms of stiffness. In making a selfie pole, stiffness is important, having a Ti tube needs to be thicker than SS. I ended up with the same weight or maybe even slightly heavier.
BTW, my selfie pole was intended for a DSLR. It wasn't a go at all. The tube is too thick in diameter than I like in order to take the weight. and I had no control on the wall thickness of the tube, so can't experiment there.