Was a bit remiss of me not to have a build thread and enter this bike, only to win BOTM, so here's the story for those wanting more photos.
I'll start by stating the obvious. I BLOODY LOVE BIKES. Like lots of kids, I was (un)fortunate enough to get a Raleigh Maverick for my birthday which was used for bombing around town for a few years before discovering where these things can really take you. By late 1989 I was fully hooked on the mtb life and rode the wave of technical advances. I've had loads of bikes, some for a matter of months and others for years. For my 40th birthday I wanted something special, something no-one else would ever have. Looked at a few boutique off the peg brands but nothing quite hit the spot.
I started hunting for a custom builder that could understand what I was looking for. I had a Cannondale Flash 29er which I really liked but I just didn't quite fit. I've short legs/long torso for my height and often struggle to get enough length for the right stand over clearance or vice versa. I've always loved quirky components and really liked the Lefty fork on the bike. I chanced over an article in Singletrack with a review of a Saffron Frameworks bike, with an integrated one piece carbon seatpost. Reminded me of a modern take on an old Pace. A quick visit to the website ( https://www.saffronframeworks.com ) and I was hooked. Endless possibilities. One feature that really grabbed me was Matthew's signature bi-lamiate head tube. It as like a modern nod towards the old lugged frame I'd started on. Reynolds has also not long introduced their stainless tube set and I rather liked the Ti look. Lead times were quoted in 2-3 months, so I sent off an email. Matthew phoned me back on his was to Bespoked 2014 in April and we had a few phone calls discussing my requirements. When he said he'd ridden a bike with a lefty for a while, I knew I had my man.
During the initial discussion I was swayed away from stainless as he reckons it doesn't actually make a nice feeling mtb frame. We also couldn't do the carbon seat tube, as I wanted a dropper post and Reynolds couldn't give him strength ratings for using the carbon tube with one. Normally the tube he uses has a bolt on seat clamp topper, not a clamped post. I was advised towards Columbus Zona tubing, which although lower down the Columbus order is better suited to mtb frames. The one cuckoo in the nest is a Reynolds 853 down tube, used as a top tube to take the extra forces from the double crown of the Lefty fork. The bi-laminate head tube was a go-er though.
Like I said this was before the Bespoked show, at which he won a load of awards and orders exploded. I had my place in the build queue, but as I discovered the time frame was about to expand, significantly. Early May I'd paid my deposit and was down in London for the bike fit at Cyclefit HQ. It was a very interesting experience and a bit surreal. Watching your pedal stroke and leg movements on the screen as your stick leg went up and down and your power output varied as small adjustments were made. I don't doubt the guy's experience ( he used to do Cancellara's fits ) but even now I'm not sure about the relevance of such small changes to a seated position when you move about so much on an mtb. another thing was he was recommending a 110mm stem, which I was not happy about. I wanted more length in the frame and a shorter stem. This is where the frame builders art comes in and he used the bike fit data and measurements from my Cannondale to come up with the final geometry. I also visited Matthew at his workshop to talk about the fame fitting. This is when we decided to use Poly Drops. These are interchangeable dropouts where one part is structural with the frame and the other part can be changed. I went for 142 thru axle, but this can easily be swapped out to a qr or even single speed one, without altering the frame. Then it was just a case of waiting. And waiting. And waiting.
Christmas was coming up and finally my place in the build queue was arriving. I chose the slightly more expensive route of having Matthew source the parts as I had a pretty specific build in mind and wanted to know he'd have all the parts on hand during the build process.
I went for -
100mm Lefty fork with remote lock out.
Thomson stem and carbon bars.
ESI chunky grips.
Sram Guide RS brakes. 180mm Rotors.
Hope headset and BB.
Sram X01 11 speed drive train.
Velocity Blunt 35 rims on a Lefty front hub and Hope Pro 2 rear.
Maxxis Ardent tyres. 2.4 front and 2.25 rear.
Rockshox Reverb dropper post.
Hope seat clamp.
Brooks Cambium saddle.
Choosing frame colour was nerve wracking. I'd seen a few metallic blues I liked but in the end played it safe and went for a Porsche metallic grey.
The bike was finally finished in March, but then came a phone call. Bespoked 2015 was coming up and he wanted to show the bike there. So the bike had it's weekend in the spotlight and I finally received it in April, one year on from the initial email.
The head tube is gorgeous and a lot of work. He had to build the frame, then cut the head tube apart. The inner part is the custom machined from a block of stainless steel to take a tapered steerer tube for the fork. This is the brazed into the frame to look like a solid piece. When the main frame is painted the stainless is polished for a contrast finish. The dropouts are also contrast brushed.
So how does it fit? Perfectly. Predictable I know given it's a custom build, but there was always a tiny little voice in the back of my mind saying "What if it's crap?"
It was a bike I wanted to use for riding from the door, hence the high rolling 29" wheels. 40 mile rides no niggles, just tired legs. Difficult to do justice to the feeling of something that's "just right".
So, a years on what's changed on it? Well, apart from grips and tyres not much, until one day I was cleaning........
(The observant amongst you may notice that it's not the same colour as the BOTM photos, but that's a story for another day, as I've maxed out on attachments)
I'll start by stating the obvious. I BLOODY LOVE BIKES. Like lots of kids, I was (un)fortunate enough to get a Raleigh Maverick for my birthday which was used for bombing around town for a few years before discovering where these things can really take you. By late 1989 I was fully hooked on the mtb life and rode the wave of technical advances. I've had loads of bikes, some for a matter of months and others for years. For my 40th birthday I wanted something special, something no-one else would ever have. Looked at a few boutique off the peg brands but nothing quite hit the spot.
I started hunting for a custom builder that could understand what I was looking for. I had a Cannondale Flash 29er which I really liked but I just didn't quite fit. I've short legs/long torso for my height and often struggle to get enough length for the right stand over clearance or vice versa. I've always loved quirky components and really liked the Lefty fork on the bike. I chanced over an article in Singletrack with a review of a Saffron Frameworks bike, with an integrated one piece carbon seatpost. Reminded me of a modern take on an old Pace. A quick visit to the website ( https://www.saffronframeworks.com ) and I was hooked. Endless possibilities. One feature that really grabbed me was Matthew's signature bi-lamiate head tube. It as like a modern nod towards the old lugged frame I'd started on. Reynolds has also not long introduced their stainless tube set and I rather liked the Ti look. Lead times were quoted in 2-3 months, so I sent off an email. Matthew phoned me back on his was to Bespoked 2014 in April and we had a few phone calls discussing my requirements. When he said he'd ridden a bike with a lefty for a while, I knew I had my man.
During the initial discussion I was swayed away from stainless as he reckons it doesn't actually make a nice feeling mtb frame. We also couldn't do the carbon seat tube, as I wanted a dropper post and Reynolds couldn't give him strength ratings for using the carbon tube with one. Normally the tube he uses has a bolt on seat clamp topper, not a clamped post. I was advised towards Columbus Zona tubing, which although lower down the Columbus order is better suited to mtb frames. The one cuckoo in the nest is a Reynolds 853 down tube, used as a top tube to take the extra forces from the double crown of the Lefty fork. The bi-laminate head tube was a go-er though.
Like I said this was before the Bespoked show, at which he won a load of awards and orders exploded. I had my place in the build queue, but as I discovered the time frame was about to expand, significantly. Early May I'd paid my deposit and was down in London for the bike fit at Cyclefit HQ. It was a very interesting experience and a bit surreal. Watching your pedal stroke and leg movements on the screen as your stick leg went up and down and your power output varied as small adjustments were made. I don't doubt the guy's experience ( he used to do Cancellara's fits ) but even now I'm not sure about the relevance of such small changes to a seated position when you move about so much on an mtb. another thing was he was recommending a 110mm stem, which I was not happy about. I wanted more length in the frame and a shorter stem. This is where the frame builders art comes in and he used the bike fit data and measurements from my Cannondale to come up with the final geometry. I also visited Matthew at his workshop to talk about the fame fitting. This is when we decided to use Poly Drops. These are interchangeable dropouts where one part is structural with the frame and the other part can be changed. I went for 142 thru axle, but this can easily be swapped out to a qr or even single speed one, without altering the frame. Then it was just a case of waiting. And waiting. And waiting.
Christmas was coming up and finally my place in the build queue was arriving. I chose the slightly more expensive route of having Matthew source the parts as I had a pretty specific build in mind and wanted to know he'd have all the parts on hand during the build process.
I went for -
100mm Lefty fork with remote lock out.
Thomson stem and carbon bars.
ESI chunky grips.
Sram Guide RS brakes. 180mm Rotors.
Hope headset and BB.
Sram X01 11 speed drive train.
Velocity Blunt 35 rims on a Lefty front hub and Hope Pro 2 rear.
Maxxis Ardent tyres. 2.4 front and 2.25 rear.
Rockshox Reverb dropper post.
Hope seat clamp.
Brooks Cambium saddle.
Choosing frame colour was nerve wracking. I'd seen a few metallic blues I liked but in the end played it safe and went for a Porsche metallic grey.
The bike was finally finished in March, but then came a phone call. Bespoked 2015 was coming up and he wanted to show the bike there. So the bike had it's weekend in the spotlight and I finally received it in April, one year on from the initial email.
The head tube is gorgeous and a lot of work. He had to build the frame, then cut the head tube apart. The inner part is the custom machined from a block of stainless steel to take a tapered steerer tube for the fork. This is the brazed into the frame to look like a solid piece. When the main frame is painted the stainless is polished for a contrast finish. The dropouts are also contrast brushed.
So how does it fit? Perfectly. Predictable I know given it's a custom build, but there was always a tiny little voice in the back of my mind saying "What if it's crap?"
It was a bike I wanted to use for riding from the door, hence the high rolling 29" wheels. 40 mile rides no niggles, just tired legs. Difficult to do justice to the feeling of something that's "just right".
So, a years on what's changed on it? Well, apart from grips and tyres not much, until one day I was cleaning........
(The observant amongst you may notice that it's not the same colour as the BOTM photos, but that's a story for another day, as I've maxed out on attachments)
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