13 April, 2007

City Bike

A few photos of the city bike frame. It exceeds my expectations. Please excuse the dust and fingerprints on the paint; the paint is perfect. Major kudos to Ahren! And to Carl for painting it.

Please note the pump pegs, generator mount, adjustable chain guard mounts, over BB cable routing, dual dropout eyelets, and wide flat fork crown for fat 650b tires.

Update:
I've started to build it up and I have even more respect for the amount of detail Ahren had to consider when building it. This is one complicated frame and it's impressive that everything fits so perfectly. Many racing frames with half the braze-ons don't come close to being this well thought out.

The French bars and stems arrived this afternoon and I've used one of the porteur bars on the city bike. It looks great and is a nice shape.

I'll drill and mount the chain guard and fenders in the morning when I'm fresh, otherwise most of the components are on the frame.

23 comments:

Anonymous said...

That's really sweet. I've been checking Ahren's blog regularly for any photos, but he hasn't updated it in months. I'm looking forward to seeing it built up. Have you found a source for the chain guard?

Anonymous said...

WOW... !!! When can i order!!!???? looks great....

Anonymous said...

Good lookin' frameset. Hope to make it out on Sunday.

Will you have regular hours at some point, other open houses later on, or work by appointment?

Anonymous said...

Looks like you're heading in the right direction of distinguished city bikes...
http://tinyurl.com/2wz7ur

Velo Orange said...

We will have regular hours, but maybe not too regular for the next week or two since there is still a lot to be done at the shop.

You can order the frames now. Neil Berg's is being built right now.

I can't wait to fit the CLB chainguard. The fitting Ahren made are too cool. I just found I'm out of single chain ring bolts and seat binder bolts. I hope Capital Bikes has them; or it's a trip to DC.

Anonymous said...

Chris,
If you need some bolts picked up let me know, I can get them from College Park Bikes and bring them out this weekend.

Michael

Anonymous said...

When will I be able to get a mixte?

Anonymous said...

You can get a mixte if Neil's wife's mixte works out as planned.

Velo Orange said...

Michael, Thanks for the offer, but I borrowed them from my Motobecane.

Reference Library said...

I know you'll be busy with the open house, but please post photos of the semi-builtup city bike as soon as possible. I can't wait to see the French bars... -Andy

Anonymous said...

Very nice. Elegant clean lines. Look forward to seeing the built up bike.

Reference Library said...

Looks great! Is that Stronglight crank made for one ring? If not, what kind of spacers did you use to accomodate a single ring?

Would you offer a complete VO build? Or just a frame/fork?

Anonymous said...

That CLB chain guard is the coolest thing I have ever seen. Very Art Nouveau.

Anonymous said...

Handlebars are very nice. Chainstay is quite a piece!

Velo Orange said...

We are just starting to do complete bikes. But we can't find a chainguard like that for every bike, though we do have some other neat models in stock.

That's a regular Stronglight 93 crank with bolts for a single ring. Did you know that Stronglights still makes the rings to fit that crank? Nice as it is, it'll be replaced with a Nevar. the Stronglight is just too busy looking and it doesn't seem right with the flowing lines of the chainguard.

I like the bars a lot. The stems are pretty too. The bike will get reverse levers soon, but there was no time to drill the bars today. And the bars will be taped and shellaced.

Anonymous said...

Are those Belleri handlebars?

Can't wait to see the full pic!

Anonymous said...

IMO, the CLB chaincase is too fancy. Wald makes a chromed steel chaincase that has clean, simple lines - elegant in a utilitarian manner.
http://tinyurl.com/2cb5pl

Anonymous said...

Chris,
Have you considered using internal ger hubs?

Do you have strong feelings for or against this type of setup? Just curious...as the comments here are always quite good and insightful. Thanks,

Jack

Velo Orange said...

The next two bikes will have internal gear hubs. We will build them fixed, single speed, internal geared hub, rear dérailleur and with two dérailleurs. The basic geometry stays the same, but the drive-train is up to the customer.

I actually would have preferred an internal gear hub on my bike, but I wanted to try one with a derailleur to see how it would work with the chainguard and with the eventual chain case.

Anonymous said...

wow. where do you find a chain protector like that?

Anonymous said...

Those CLB chainguards are neat, what with the art nouveau styling along with a superbly practical shape to keep one’s trousers away from the dirty stuff. It’s actually a very common design in Europe, although the ones I’ve seen must be knockoffs because they have the circle but no “CLB” in them. I saw one in Paris that had a little color painting of Jesus Christ in that circle – now that’s gotta give you bit of a tailwind …

I found one of these (no CLB logo) and have put it on my current beater-to-porteur project. I’ll send along a picture when that gets done. I think you guys will give it a thumbs-up.



/david_nj, who cannot figure out how to work this new blogging sign-in thing

Dad said...

Contary to my earlier sanguinity, it turned out to be devilishly hard to mount the bar-end brake levers in those Nitto porteur-type bars. The difference in diameter is just too great. The fellow who I'd asked to do the machining was super nice and made up a new set of bases for the levers -- visually identical but machined out of a block much stronger alloy. Those cast bases just don't take to machining very well, and the bars would really have to be reamed out to accommodate the levers, to the point that I think there's a real chance of breaking.

Anonymous said...

Chris,
Regarding the TA style bottle cages, have you considered a run of handelbar mounted cages?
Some of us have frames without bottle bosses.Besides, they do look pretty cool on the stem and bars.
Bill in Rockville