This frame and fork are the last projects to leave the shop in July. The rider is 5'8" and races s/s on a 29er so this will be his next ride. The frame and fork are nearly all True Temper , just the rear stays are Dedaccai. This is pretty typical of the 29er's I build these days....seems that the rigid fork is back and gears are not the norm. My idea of an ideal bike is one of these with an internal-geared hub......all of the range, no der's or chain slap. Look for that bike late this winter-I'll be riding it, at least if I ever get the time to build it !
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Monday, July 26, 2010
Coupler frame
There were a lot of specific requests on this frame. The couplers, the cast dropouts and the headtube-mounted cable adjusters are a few. I also built a for that along with the frame will fit fenders and long-reach Shimano brakes. Big-tire road bikes are very popular this year. The steel fork is making a comeback as well.
Saturday, July 17, 2010
Scandium road frame
I'm in the final stretch before leaving for Ashland to teach and this is frame # 2 in a small batch of scandium frames that I hope to send to the heat treater before I leave. I'm also doing a couple more steel frames as well.....full schedule. This bike is designed to be really stiff in the BB area. I used an MTB downtube 44 mm in diameter. It may be large but it is still really light. I would be surprised if this frame is over 3 lbs. I used some heavy wall chainstays as well, the same kind I use in cyclocross bikes. The rest of the tubing is pretty much the norm for this style of frame.
Wishbone in steel
It isn't often that I get a request for a wishbone seatstay on a steel road bike but here it is, probably one of four that I have built in the last 30-odd years. The parts for the wishbone were NOS pretty much throughout. The customer has and older Bontrager 'road lite' and really liked the ride quality so this frame reflects some of the features and geometry of that frame except for the larger diameter tubing anf the 1 1/8" steerer format. The weight is 3 lbs. 14 oz. , not bad for steel, especially stout stuff like the True Temper OX used.
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Steel road frame with internal cable
A steel fork is a nice compliment to a steel frame as it can be painted to match and it also can be built to match, both for geometry and aesthetic considerations. The task is so much easier with my new Anvil fork jig.
There has been a trend toward people ordering steel road frames as of late. I really don't have a problem with this as my experience with steel goes back to the times of the dawning of the universe. I guess I'm pretty old.......so here's the latest one. The frame is shot from the non-drive side so you can see the internal brake cable setup. It's not unique to my bikes by any stretch of the imagination but it is a nice touch and gives this welded bike a little more class.
There has been a trend toward people ordering steel road frames as of late. I really don't have a problem with this as my experience with steel goes back to the times of the dawning of the universe. I guess I'm pretty old.......so here's the latest one. The frame is shot from the non-drive side so you can see the internal brake cable setup. It's not unique to my bikes by any stretch of the imagination but it is a nice touch and gives this welded bike a little more class.
I call it a Swiggoretti.
No doubt, this customer was taken with another builders design....I guess he decided to buy local instead. The task was to replicate certain features but also stay true to how I might apporach building a frame with such large diameter steel tubes. It seems to have been a success. I fell lucky !
Monday, July 12, 2010
Team frames for sale
This team rider, Chris McGovern has decided to start his own team so he's cutting loose of his two team scandium frames. The frames were used for the 2009 season only and appear to be in mint condition. Chris sent me some photos which I was unable to upload. Here's a photo of him with one of the bikes in the lead at the Pilarcitos race at McLaren park last season. Chris can be reached at mcgovski@gmail.com if you are interested in the frames. Chris is 5'11" and the frames have a 57.5 top tube, if I remember correctly. These frames are built form the GX-2 tubing that I haven't been able to get since last year.....it's the world-class stuff.
Monday, July 5, 2010
June scandium batch
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Framebuilder commute
I have showed a series of photos about the building process. Now I'd like you to check out my commute home from work , at least when I make the time to do it. The short way to work is only about ten blocks of suburban riding. Today I'll take the longer way, about 1 1/2 hours of dirt. Here's my bike. Only about five minutes of pedaling from my shop door is this, the enterance to Wilder Ranch state park.A number of years ago , lots of mountain bikers, hikers and horseback riders lobbied to get the state to buy this pristeen land and turn it into a park . Lots of hard working folks succeeded and for the last 12-odd years we have this great expanse of open land to explore right out our front door.
All of todays ride will be fire roads but it dosen't have to be. There's a pretty solid connection of singletrack for nearly all the route.
The first half of the ride is all uphill, almost a solid half hour of climbing, most of it like this through open meadows.
I had to shoot this tree-it was really striking this late in the day. There are lots of oaks at this altitude but higher up it is all redwoods and pine.
I guess we get the occasional lightning strike. Although it isn't really high up and the tree wasn't that tall, this is the only explanation I can think of for this incinerated pine.
Here's the final few hundered feet of uphill before crossing over into the university land.
This sign greets you as you cross into the university of California at Santa Cruz. There's a lot of forest land behind the college and it is where I first got the idea to build mountian bikes. In the late '70's my boss at the Bicycle center, Roger Sands took us riding here on road bikes . Roger had a bike that I had never seen until that time....a Bob Jackson cyclcross bike. We explored for a couple of hours until the landowner spotted us and escorted us out of the forest with a stern warning: "Don't come back or you'll be sitting in jail for tresspassing." -It was quite a different time back then. This spot is called 'twin gates' and it is a gathering spot for fans of PBR and mountian biking after work in the summer.
Now you really know you are in California....endangered species signs. I don't know about you, but if I saw one of these tiger beetles I think I would run away as fast as I could.
Ahh, finally-downhill , almost the whole way home. It's getting late so I'm staying on the fire road tonight.
This spot is named " The tanks"......I guess it's obvious why. Over the years this has been the meeting place for dirt cyclists both good and evil, sane and insane, sober and totally shitfaced.I have witnessed many things here, bicycle jousting-sort of....story telling , tall people falling over, a bike being put up impossibly high in a tree. -Hi, Eric !
There are many choices for the decent but I'll stick to this road, the main drag. It is not far from here on this road about three years ago where I did a drunken high-side on this very bike and wound up with a broken thumb and a lot of missed rides. I no longer stop for a toast with the crew up at twin gates .
It's starting to get dark but I wanted to get in a few more photos of landmarks of the west side dirt commute. This is the beginning of a trail that I named " the lock 'em up " back in 1982. I was on a ride with Mark Michel of the local shop, the Bicycle Trip. The trail had been cut earlier that week for a horse endurance event. We started down the trail and were amazed at the tight turns and steep dropoffs everywhere. There really wasn't anything like it that we had ridden to that point. Both of us though that nobody would ever be able to ride down it without a dab or a crash or two. In a few weeks we were all over that trail , learning all the body english needed to survive the plunge. It is this trail by far that shaped my earliest mountain bike geometry .
Now this is why I live here. Every day I come home to this, a little city on the north side of Monterey bay. I got all sentimental when I stopped for this photo. It's not that great of a shot but it is that great of a place to call home.
I guess we get the occasional lightning strike. Although it isn't really high up and the tree wasn't that tall, this is the only explanation I can think of for this incinerated pine.
Here's the final few hundered feet of uphill before crossing over into the university land.
This sign greets you as you cross into the university of California at Santa Cruz. There's a lot of forest land behind the college and it is where I first got the idea to build mountian bikes. In the late '70's my boss at the Bicycle center, Roger Sands took us riding here on road bikes . Roger had a bike that I had never seen until that time....a Bob Jackson cyclcross bike. We explored for a couple of hours until the landowner spotted us and escorted us out of the forest with a stern warning: "Don't come back or you'll be sitting in jail for tresspassing." -It was quite a different time back then. This spot is called 'twin gates' and it is a gathering spot for fans of PBR and mountian biking after work in the summer.
Now you really know you are in California....endangered species signs. I don't know about you, but if I saw one of these tiger beetles I think I would run away as fast as I could.
Ahh, finally-downhill , almost the whole way home. It's getting late so I'm staying on the fire road tonight.
This spot is named " The tanks"......I guess it's obvious why. Over the years this has been the meeting place for dirt cyclists both good and evil, sane and insane, sober and totally shitfaced.I have witnessed many things here, bicycle jousting-sort of....story telling , tall people falling over, a bike being put up impossibly high in a tree. -Hi, Eric !
There are many choices for the decent but I'll stick to this road, the main drag. It is not far from here on this road about three years ago where I did a drunken high-side on this very bike and wound up with a broken thumb and a lot of missed rides. I no longer stop for a toast with the crew up at twin gates .
It's starting to get dark but I wanted to get in a few more photos of landmarks of the west side dirt commute. This is the beginning of a trail that I named " the lock 'em up " back in 1982. I was on a ride with Mark Michel of the local shop, the Bicycle Trip. The trail had been cut earlier that week for a horse endurance event. We started down the trail and were amazed at the tight turns and steep dropoffs everywhere. There really wasn't anything like it that we had ridden to that point. Both of us though that nobody would ever be able to ride down it without a dab or a crash or two. In a few weeks we were all over that trail , learning all the body english needed to survive the plunge. It is this trail by far that shaped my earliest mountain bike geometry .
Now this is why I live here. Every day I come home to this, a little city on the north side of Monterey bay. I got all sentimental when I stopped for this photo. It's not that great of a shot but it is that great of a place to call home.
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