14 July, 2009

Happy Bastille Day!



Also, we an have almost firm deliver date on the 650b Polyvalent frames. They are about 90 days out. I will get additional confirmation and commitment soon and then we can accept pre-orders. As I wrote earlier:
The main differences from the photo are that the color will be dark gray and there will be an extended head tube. It will be available in four sizes initally, 51 x 54cm, 54 x 56cm, 57 x 59cm, and 60 x 61cm. Remember that it's designed for city bars so the top tube is longer than on a rando frame. We'll add more sizes on the next run.

The introductory price for the frame and fork will be $400, plus shipping. That price will go up on subsequent production runs.

25 comments:

  1. When do you expect the new pre-drilled Taiwanese porteur racks?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Happy Bastile Day Chris! Liberté, égalité, fraternité! (Say, there might be a name in there for those French headsets your getting made. :) )

    John B.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Happy Bastille Day!

    And a question: Is anybody making a 650b tire with reflective sidewalls? I'm really sold on reflective sidewalls as a safety feature after an incident near my house last year.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Looking great!

    Can't wait to see the final model and place an order.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I still don't understand a 73-degree seat tube angle on a city bike meant for high bars -- it seems like a shallower seat tube angle (maybe even as shallow as 70 degrees or so) would "pivot" the rider around the bottom bracket and serve two useful purposes: (1) put the rider in a more powerful position; (2) allow the rider to put a toe down from a properly positioned saddle. I don't see the downside, so I wonder what I'm missing?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Ned C,

    Schwalbe Marathon

    Darren

    ReplyDelete
  7. Ned, the Schwalbe Marathon has a reflective strip (and a generator track), and is available in 650B. (Listed at 42mm, but I find they're usually a bit narrower than stated in the sizes I use.)

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thanks for the heads up on the Schwalbes, I'll have to put this frame into consideration.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Chris, what's the chance that you'll sell the Poly as both a frameset and as a semi-complete bike via a recommended bomponent kit? Having a pre-picked kit that would allow people interested in this type of bike to build up a bike for, say, under a grand (which I would think would be very achievable), would make this a no-brainer.

    ReplyDelete
  10. The porteur racks are due in late August.

    The geometry of this frame is based on French constructeur frames. They are simply not the same as the slacker angle Dutch or British frames.

    The plan is to offer just the frames this year and complete bikes next year. We might do a build kit.

    ReplyDelete
  11. happy belated bastille day!


    is there an eta on the VO cable/housing? I'd hate to buy some somewhere else for a project and then have it pop up here the next week.

    ReplyDelete
  12. We don't yet have a ship date for the housing. This is our first order with this factory and we were told that orders usually take about 90 days, so maybe another month or two till it arrives.

    ReplyDelete
  13. Chris,
    my memory is failing - did you at one point say you were looking at a mixte version of this bike or am I badly confused? I think this frame looks beautiful and I think it will still look great in the gray you have planned. I'm just curious about a mixte version of the same. Thanks

    Seth V.

    PS: The brazeons for the chainguard make me very happy.

    ReplyDelete
  14. The Mixte is lugged and used different geometry. The pre-production prototypes are now being built. I'll post more info as soon as they arrive. I wouldn't expect the frames to be available until this winter.

    ReplyDelete
  15. this is the carbon fiber mixte right??

    ;)

    ReplyDelete
  16. "Dutch or British" frames doesn't really mean anything. Why is it you always have to drag British bicycles into this? Couldn't you be more specific and say that yours in not a Roadster frame, which is a specific bicycle and not typical of "British bicycles."

    For some idiotic reason a certain model of Raleigh Lenton and the generic "British roadster" are believed to be typical of British bicycles. There is no need to re-write history to make a point about frame geometry.

    Nor is the roadster typical of european bicycles as is often the claim made by the bloggers and fashionistas who promote inappropriately heavy and wheel floppy dutch roadsters as the ideal transportation.

    It would be a lot better to just come out and say that your bicycles are not slack roadsters because you've put some thought into their design as opposed to peddling 5olb fashion accesory dutch bicycles to people who don't know anything about bicycles.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Anon 5:47: A 50 lb. Dutch bicycle may not be a bike you like (or I for that matter). It is, nevertheless, a bike. If someone who owns one knows about it, that someone does, in fact know about bikes. Perhaps not much about bikes you and I like. But certainly about the bike that person likes.

    ReplyDelete
  18. Re: The vitriolic comments regarding the "Roadster" style bicycle -
    1. The wheel flop you describe is easily rectified by choosing the proper tyre width to offer the appropriate amount of "pneumatic trial". You don't need to be a lawyer to understand the concept of pneumatical trial, but I think it helps.

    2. In my own testing I found that the standard diameter gas-pipe tubing, slack angles, and long wheelbase gave a most enjoyable "planning" effect, and I can easily outclimb any of the sub-18lb. racing bikes in my stable. I'm not sure if they indeed did "plan" on this effect, but nonetheless it is so clearly there, and not just in my head.

    Now go ride your bike and stop being so earnest !!

    ReplyDelete
  19. As pictured, the Polyvalent looks like it has a 3-speed rear hub. That makes a lot of sense for a city bike but there seem to be very few 36-hole 650B rims out there (other than a few old stock Velocity Dyads) and all internal-gear hubs from Sturmey-Archer and SRAM have 36 holes unless I am mistaken. The Alfine comes in a 32-hole version but it is 8-speed and quite expensive.

    There are no pre-built 650B internal-gear wheels out there to my knowledge.

    Will you be offering a pre-built 650B S-A 3-speed wheel on either a VO rim or a new run from some other supplier?

    ReplyDelete
  20. Velocity Synergy is always available in 650b 36h

    ReplyDelete
  21. The bike shown has a rear derailleur and cassette. This is the way many porteur bikes were built up. Of course 8-speed hubs were not available until fairly recently.

    We have already ordered 36h 650b rims. And we are hoping that they arrive right before the frames so we can have some wheel sets built up.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Chris: Starting Velo Orange makes you something of a revolutionary in a bike world still dominated by racing wannabes and WWF-inspired graphics.

    Why not have a pass hunter, city bike and touring bike called liberte, egalite and fraternite respectively? And why not sell bikes or parts named for Robespierre, Danton and Napoleon.
    Or something named Charenton?

    OK, I was being drole. On a more serious note, I want that red, white (OK, it's silver) and blue bottom bracket. It will go perfectly with one of those old Zefal Competition pumps. Now, as to why anyone would want to match a pump to a bottom bracket...je ne sais.

    Oh, and I know this greeting is tres tarde, but here goes: Meilleurs voeux pour le jour du Bastille.

    Merci pour tout.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Thanks for the update Chris! Can you give us the RAL# for this dark gray? Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Reading between the lines, sounds like the the front end will be low-trail/high rake. How low/high? Or is that proprietary...

    ReplyDelete
  25. I'm really interested in this bike, what are the frame dimensions? You say the frame is based on "constructeur frames" can you be more specific? Running a search on Google doesn't turn up much on constructeur frames. Is this pretty much a variant on French porteur bikes or is it specifically based on a frame by Rene Herse or some other manufacturer? Can you give a little more detail on how you came up with the geometry?

    ReplyDelete