03 November, 2008

Pablo's VO City Gentleman Bike



Here, for your viewing pleasure, are a few photos of the latest VO Gentleman bike . The frame is fillet brazed and assembled by Ahren Rogers. The drive train uses a SA 5-speed hub and a Nervar 50.4mm BCD crank; Pablo found the pedals. The fenders, chain case, bars, etc, are all from Velo Orange. The front rack is custom. This is, in short, a true constructeur bicycle. I think Pablo will enjoy this elegant machine.

25 comments:

@realjanmaaso said...

Holy cow, that's one of the most beautiful bike I ever laid eyes on! Just gorgeous. Congratulations!

Anonymous said...

I like. But where do you put the streamers?

Anonymous said...

That's really nice. Congrats Pablo.

Dad said...

Nice bike.

I really think the front porteur racks look better and more authentic when, as in this case, the support legs go to the outside of the rack, rather than part of the way out as is the case with the current VO racks. That being said, obviously the latter are very nice indeed.

Anonymous said...

Sweet-looking bike. I especially like the white rubber block pedals with the chain case.

Anonymous said...

I, for one, think we need more photos of built-up VO frames. How many are there out there by now?

dori said...

can a flickr page be started?

Greg said...

dorina, Pablo, Chris, and anyone else, check out my Velo-Orange flickr group here: http://www.flickr.com/groups/879085@N24/

I'd love to have more V-O frames and complete bikes.

Cheers!

Greg

Anonymous said...

I'm curious ... I realize that's a SA 5 Speed internal rear hub ... but what is the black lever looking device? I'm trying to figure out what that may be. Does anyone know?

Phil

Anonymous said...

that chain guard is hideous.

Jonah Gray said...

Very nice all over. Excellent choice of colour. Gentleman is spelled wrong in the title of the post. The chain guard is awesome.

Anonymous said...

The Sturmey Archer Sprinter S5 has an indicator arm. You can get one at Permaco. Overall gear range of 225 percent. That's swell.

Steve said...

greg said:

dorina, Pablo, Chris, and anyone else, check out my Velo-Orange flickr group here: http://www.flickr.com/groups/879085@N24/

I'd love to have more V-O frames and complete bikes.


Thanks! I've just added pix of my Velo Orange Randonneur and Tom R's Velo Orange Gentleman's City Bike.

Have you added Johnny Coast's photos of VO bikes under construction?

Anonymous said...

Steve,

Beautiful randonneur. How did you remove the black paint off your Zefal pump?

Greg said...

Steve.

Have you added Johnny Coast's photos of VO bikes under construction?

I haven't added anyone's photos but my own. If someone wanted to get permission from VO builders to post pics on the group, that would be great.

nordic_68 said...

Great looking bike. But it seems like a sprung saddle is made for a more upright posture, meaning the handlebars should ideally be above the saddle. Just my 2cents.

Anonymous said...

I have a Champion FLyer on My Cross Check. No problems, only benefits. It is a B17, but with a bit of shock absorption. My bars are lower than my saddle.
And, that is a pretty bike. I bet the chian case is the sort of thing that looks even better in person, and with a bit of patina.
mb

Anonymous said...

I'm all for chain cases, but I'm puzzled by the half chain case. With fenders, I assume it's supposeed to be an all-weather bike, but then why not continue the case and protect the whole thing? And where is the mud flap?

Anonymous said...

No one actually needs a chaincase anymore, unless you live below sea level and never take your bike indoors.

A hundred years ago chain cases were serious equipment, in an age when bicycle chains were made from lesser metals and lubricated with oil.

Actually their invention may have had more to do with epicyclic transmissions like the sunbeam two speed which had a single lubrication system for chain and transmission. Nowadays a chain case is really just a more attractive chain cover.

And I don't think that dutch full chain cases really protect chains from the elements, if anything they encourage chain neglect. Every chain case I've ever opened in the states and in germany revealed a dirty rusty chain.

James

Anonymous said...

The point of full chain cases is not to protect the chain, although it may achieve some of that, but to protect your clothing. In countries where these full chain covers are popular, people ride in normal street clothes all the time and they need to stay clean. That's all there is to it. Pants clips alone don't cut it.

jimmythefly said...

I'm surprised chaincases haven't caught on with the the OEMs and/or people with an affinity for deep-V rims. Room for stickers and logos seems highly prized, perhaps V-O needs to offer these in several powdercoat colors? Kidding!

Anonymous said...

So - is this bike on Flickr? Someone put it up, as the cycling community on there is pretty top-notch. Lovely bike.

Anonymous said...

I had that exact chaincase installed on a touring-geometry fixed-free bike from Toronto's Urban Cycle. Something like this: http://ucycle.com/node/152

The guys in the shop thought it was great. Also keep my laces and clothes out of the fixed drive-train. Very important! Only grumble is that I had to tape the inside of it to calm the noise of chain bounce. Anyone have comments on this noise with chaincases?

Steve said...

patates frites asks:

How did you remove the black paint off your Zefal pump?


I sanded it with 3 grades of sandpaper, first with 100, then 200, then 250, I think. I followed that up with steel wool. Up to that point, I'd been thinking of rattle-can painting it with a gloss black to match my VO Randonneur.

When I got done steel wooling it, I thought it looked pretty good that way, and I'd have had to go shopping for paint, but I had metal polish in the house, so I thought why not try it with a little silver polish, see how it turns out. I thought it was good enough to leave it; and I use this pump on 3 other bicycles, and the shiny finish matches their Honjo and Berthoud fenders better than gloss black would have done.

I think it took me an hour all told to do the job.

Unknown said...

Gorgeous!!! Except the chain guard which is uuuuugly.

I love the concept of chain guards, but if VO is gonna do it, study up on the masters. The Swedes vintage bikes usually get it bang on--stylish, minimal, but enough to save your pants. That prototype vo thing is horrrrrid. ;-)

Scroll 65% down this page to understand what a chain guard should look like:

http://www.ragtime.se/fordon.shtml