- Mojave Bottle Cages
- Moderniste Bottle Cages
- Grand Cru Caliper Brakes, Silver
- 126mm Freewheel Hubs, 36 hole
- Wheel Stabilizer, for large downtubes
- Handlebar Bottle Cage Mounts
29 November, 2016
Bottle Cages, Caliper Brakes, and Soap
Posted by VeloOrange at 10:21:00 AM 2 comments
23 November, 2016
Thanksgiving Break
By Scott
I just wanted to let folks know that we will be closed on Thursday November 24th and Friday November 25th for our annual Thanksgiving break. A bit of rain is expected here in the mid Atlantic on Thursday, but otherwise the weekend looks great for getting out and about.
We'll be back in the office on Monday the 28th at 9 am to answer questions via phone and email.
If you are stuck inside over the weekend, check out this great Piolet test ride video from the folks at Adventure Cycling that shows the bike off very well we think. Guitar Ted posted a great review of our Cigne stem here.
We'd like to our thank all our customers for your business this year and hope that all of you have a safe and wonderful Thanksgiving.
Posted by VeloOrange at 9:56:00 AM 2 comments
17 November, 2016
It's Beaujolais Nouveau Day
As I've done in the past few years, I wanted to remind everyone that Beaujolais Nouveau is released today. And as is tradition at Velo Orange, we are enjoying a glass or two at work (it enhances creativity). It's not that we're wine snobs, quite the opposite. Most of us drink craft beers and an occasional whisky. This wine is only a few weeks old and it is not a "fine wine." It is an inexpensive and quaffable wine, a fun drink that can be enjoyed by anyone to celebrate the harvest. It's meant to be consumed in copious quantities in the first year of its life. Its a light-bodied and fruity wine made from Gamay grapes, Cost is around $10 a bottle. Why today? French regulations prohibit Beaujolais Nouveau from being sold until the third Thursday in November.
Posted by VeloOrange at 2:51:00 PM 3 comments
16 November, 2016
Choosing Colors and Other Polyvalent Stuff
By Chris
One of the more difficult tasks at Velo Orange is choosing frame colors. We agonize over this. It usually require endless mini-meetings and, in the end, we almost never agree. I eventually have to choose and in this case the light blue won out. The photo shows the others colors we considered.
Another choice was disc brakes. It took me a long time to come around, but after riding with them on two bikes and recently riding a bike with canti-brakes again, I simply think discs are better, especially in wet conditions. Though I'll stick to cable actuation on future builds for the sake of simplicity. While it's true that we have retro-grouch tendencies here at VO, that's only because so much of the modern bike industry is based on change for the sake of change. We are absolutely willing to adopt technology that is actually an improvement, like disc brakes. Remember that the great French constructeurs often worked to improve braking. I am absolutely convinced that they would have embraced modern disc brakes as a worthwhile innovation. I would still choose rim brakes if going somewhere remote where obtaining spares would be difficult, and I wouldn't sell a good frame just to get one with discs, but if given the choice on a new bike I'll choose discs.
Another good innovation is large bottle cages like the VO Mojave and Anything Cages. So we included three bottle cage bosses on the down tube and fork.
We also decided to keep the 1" threaded fork, which everyone at VO agreed on. Let's remember that 1-1/8" threadless forks were developed to be a stronger system for mountain bikes, strength that is overkill on road, touring, city, or gravel bikes. 1-1/8 forks are a bit stiffer, but do we actually need that stiffness? We are, after all, running wide 650b tires to make the ride softer. One the other hand threaded forks make adjusting handlebar height easier and, in my estimation, look better. I look forward to building my Polyvalent up with one of our upcoming removable faceplate quill stems. Most bike manufacturers embraced threadless forks not because they are better, but because they are cheaper to produce and one size fits most. Both threaded and threadless forks are well proven on and off road. In the end choosing a frame based solely on the fork type seems, to me, a bit silly.
We are also working on a new fork crown, but it might not be ready in time for the first production run. In that case we'll use the same fork crown that we used on the Camargue, not a bad compromise.
Posted by VeloOrange at 11:17:00 AM 37 comments
08 November, 2016
Polyvalent 4 Frame Preview
by Igor
The Polyvalent has been our longest running frameset, going back almost eight years. It started from humble beginnings as a cantilever-braked, low-trail city bike sporting nondescript matte-black paint with orange decals. The Mark 2 and Mark 3 versions got new paint jobs, updated tubing, better accessory mountings, and other evolutionary changes. Now it's time for version 4.
The prototype frames made it just in time for Philly Bike Expo. We had lots of great feedback from folks who saw it.
- Increased tire clearances: 47mm tires with fenders. And new (57mm or so) fenders will be available.
- Normal fit: the original Polyvalents were designed with long top tubes for upright bars, but if you wanted to use drop bars, it meant less-than-optimal fit for most riders. The new version will have a shorter top tube and the same fit as our Campeur and Pass Hunter.
- Internal rear brake cable routing: Same setup as Pass Hunter Disc, internal tube for easy and clean routing.
- Triple water bottle bosses on top of the down tube. Tall bottles, easier to reach bottles, big bottles.
- Wrap-around seat stays: because they look so good and provide wider seat stay clearances.
- Vertical dropouts with stainless hanger: Sliding, swinging, and alternating dropouts are solutions that add significant complications to construction and still only work for some applications. Use a chain tensioner if you need.
- Head tube re-inforcements.
You may have noticed that there's no fork. It wasn't ready in time, and we are considering using a new custom VO fork crown on this and some other future frame models.
Tubing is double butted 4130 chromoly. Downtube is 31.8. Top tube is also 31.8 for better control with loads, though we may go with an ovalized top tube depending on how testing goes and if planing is adequate.
We're really excited to have the Polyvalent back in action, and look forward to R&D rides with the VO gang!
Posted by VeloOrange at 1:27:00 PM 51 comments
07 November, 2016
Philly Bike Expo Roundup
From L-R: Clint, Adrian, Igor, Scott. Photo courtesy of Rod Bruckdorfer |
Gorgeous Randonnneur from Royal H |
Front Constructeur Rack |
Track bike from Stanridge Speed |
Ely of RuthWorks SF makes excellent classic and modern cycling luggage |
Love seeing Chris Bishop's fine lugwork and amazing builds |
Wonderful wooden bikes with VO bits from Sojouner Cyclery |
Great to meet Jamie Swan this year and see his work up close |
Hanford Cycles of Firth and Wilson is putting out some stunning classic tourers and commuters made in Philadelphia |
Ludicrous welding and painting from Ground Up Speed Shop |
Concept bike by Cherubim, imported by Bronin Jitensha |
This lightweight, S&S coupled tourer by Winter Bicycles was stunning |
Peter Weigle came by with a terrific Rinko tourer with Zeppelin fenders and Rustines Grips mounted on the drops |
Outrageous Seven with Grand Cru brakes |
Posted by VeloOrange at 2:58:00 PM 3 comments
03 November, 2016
Come to Philly!
Please come see us, and a lot of other cool companies, at the Philly Bike Expo this weekend. The VO staff all say that this is the most fun of any bike show we've attended. Here the link for info. We'll have a prototype of the new Polyvalent frame to show you.
Posted by VeloOrange at 2:20:00 PM 8 comments