I have a custom street trials frame that my buddy made, it fits a Michelin 2.8 and has 14.75" chain stays. I say its possible.typo maybe? i dont think there is any possible way, most dj guys have a hard time going under 15" with 2.2 semi slicks... 15" cs with 2.3+ knobbies is going to be, well, impossible.
lets see a picture of all that clearance you have...I have a custom street trials frame that my buddy made, it fits a Michelin 2.8 and has 14.75" chain stays. I say its possible.
It's a little higher than that. Like 12.85ish. But yeah, it's a little too low. I'd go for something more like 13.25 at least.my old bike that i referred to earlier had a 12.625" BB. Unsagged. Stable as all get out. But it murdered many a pedal at the hand of east coast rox.
26"? what size chain ring? pics or it didnt happen, unless maybe your running a 22 tooth or smaller sprocketI have a custom street trials frame that my buddy made, it fits a Michelin 2.8 and has 14.75" chain stays. I say its possible.
Precisely!A 15" CS is doable. It's not like a hardtail were you need to fit the chainstay in there. With the high pivot, it can be done. I think it will be too short for good handling though. Bikes, like all vehicles, perform best with 50/50 weight distribution. To short of a rear and you have to shorten the front which gives you a too short wheelbase. Wheelbase probably has more affect on handling than any other measurement, and it's one that is often never looked at.
Now that I've modified my roscoe, and it rides pretty damn well, havent really been in a rush to do another hardtail. My next frame will be a DH specific hardtailI was hoping you were going to make a hardtail but this sounds good too
I'll have to scan them, they are all hand drafted full size and ½ scale.Do you have any initial drawings that you could post up?
Not gonna happen.Make the build super cool and do it as a 29er
Im not using a spanish BB, just the style of bearings being pressed directly into the shell. I will be machining the shell out of solid stock. This way I can have just enough clearance in the middle for the 19mm axle to pass through, then I will turn down the middle, basically making the shell look like an hour glass(for the lack of better words).am I missing something here? last time I checked Euro BB's were a smaller diameter than a Spanish shell. I respect your engineering judgement and agree that the pressfit of the spanish is a better interface, it does away with bandaid external bottom brackets, and will give more weld area than a threaded euro...
but if you are looking at solely clearance...
Thats pretty close to what Im doing, but with more of a radius, to prevent stress risers.The second arrangement would be similar but inolve a regular cylindrical BB shell, but with the center being only being wide enough to clear the axle, then stepping up to a shoulder at each side to house the bearings. A bit like if you were to machine an all in one headset and headtube out of the one piece of metal.
I love how everyone is telling Zenki how to make his frame, and how it should be more like conventional bikes.
Why would you make a custom bike that is similar to everything else? Custom bikes should be kooky. I can't wait to see how this turns out.
Its only that short completely topped out. at sag it will be just over 16", so while riding the bike it wont be that short.A 15" CS is doable. It's not like a hardtail were you need to fit the chainstay in there. With the high pivot, it can be done. I think it will be too short for good handling though. Bikes, like all vehicles, perform best with 50/50 weight distribution. To short of a rear and you have to shorten the front which gives you a too short wheelbase. Wheelbase probably has more affect on handling than any other measurement, and it's one that is often never looked at.
Yup!Precisely!
The issue with dirt jumpers running short rear ends is that you've got to have clearance for a tire and a sprocket in the same area. With a high-pivot and jack-shaft setup, you move those elements away from each other and open up new space to work in.
Yup. I own enough machine tools to machine everything I will need. Also, with aluminum, when you weld it you lose a lot of strength, from losing its temper. It can be re-heat treated but its something i dont wanna deal with right now. Plus, the benefit of steel is its compliance, and I think those benefits are better suited for the main triangle, than in the swinger. I could be all wrong though.just taking a wild guess here, but he's probably more comfortable manipulating and welding steal, planning on machining lots on the swing arm thus the alu
are you using alu tubes for the swingarm? box stock? or going full-german and cnc'ing (sorry, had to throw that one in). I'd be concerned about not heat treating alu.Yup. Also, with aluminum, when you weld it you lose a lot of strength, from losing its temper. It can be re-heat treated but its something i dont wanna deal with right now. Plus, the benefit of steel is its compliance, and I think those benefits are better suited for the main triangle, then in the swinger.
interested to see how your "no heat treating" plan works out. what Alu are you going to use?
i'm drawing up a new front triangle to build this summer and 6061 is winning, my buddy can get it heat treated for ~$100 so i'm gonna go for it. i had a 6082 frame that cracked rewelded and it cracked again within the first 10 rides..
Full on German hahaha! Thats funny because its true on multiple levels. Im half German btw. The swinger is gonna be machined from solid 7075, so thats why heat treating wont be necessary.are you using alu tubes for the swingarm? box stock? or going full-german and cnc'ing (sorry, had to throw that one in). I'd be concerned about not heat treating alu.
Also, compliance in terms of what?
different strength to weight. i too prefer the feeling of steel. my current DH rig is alu front, steel swingarm, and its the best of both worlds. was just curious your reasoning for doing the opposite.Full on German hahaha! Thats funny because its true on multiple levels. Im half German btw. The swinger is gonna be machined from solid 7075, so thats why heat treating wont be necessary.
Not too sure on the weight, It'll probably be close. I prefer machining over welding, so thats a big factor for me as well.
Maybe compliance isnt the correct term to use. As most of you know aluminum is rigid as hell. I prefer the feel of steel.
depending on how this comes out i think a few people might be in the same boat as you. If it looks nice and goes throught a few stages of refinement i imagine lots of people are going to be stokedLet me know when you're taking orders. I think my next frame is going to be custom.
I would have never thought I'd go that route but I was describing what I'd like in a frame to a buddy while going up a lift and he said "I think you're going to need a custom" And I realized if I really want a frame that specific then I might have to get one made.depending on how this comes out i think a few people might be in the same boat as you. If it looks nice and goes throught a few stages of refinement i imagine lots of people are going to be stoked
I was just thinking how there are no/very few custom builders....and how surprising that is. I mean, when you can squeeze a Specialized out of a tube in taiwan and charge over 2.5grand for it, I can't imagine it would cost that much to weld one in a garage somewhere out of 4130. Hell, I now have a connection with a machinist, I'd just have to design the parts and find a welder.it really is a shame that there isn't more custom full suspension builders out there anymore. I remember in the days of people liking tanks there were lots to find, but hydroforming and acronyms for suspension designs kind of killed that. Hood, Tankass, ect
for the amount of work needed for a custom FS bike (designs, tolerances, QC, etc), i wouldn't recommend dealing with the far east unless its something you already have experience doing.I'm really tempted to try and farm some work out to china. If you hop on aliexpress or whatever, you can pick up a ti hardtail for under $1000 shipped, and they'll customize the geometry to your preferences. I'd love to get them to build a front and rear section...
dunno if xprexo would do custom... then again, i can't really thing of anything on their frame i would want to change.Actually, exprezo is pretty darn close to a low volume custom fab.
There was a feller on mtbr who had a custom hardtail done. He told them what he wanted, they drew up a sheet with specs and numbers on it, and he gave them approval. All for under a grand. I assume if you wanted to go full retard and have them fully customize one for you, you'd have to do all the drawrings yourself.
i know, I was one of the loudest crying foul. It would be almost infinitely smarter to work in steel with a local welder, even somebody who didn't know bikes. But this isn't smart, it's the internet.dunno if xprexo would do custom... then again, i can't really thing of anything on their frame i would want to change.
re: china, sure a custom hardtail is one thing and is reasonably straight forward. full suspension is a whole different animal coughcoughevilcoughcough
I had heard that he hung up his torch. That bike is rad though, and really pretty close the what I would want in a frame.isn't purgatory still around? wow, check this out: low / slack mid travel bike w/ proprietary drivetrain. rad!
I'd heard the same as well. Which is unfortunate, but not terribly surprising. It was only ever a part time hobby/ endeavor for him.I had heard that he hung up his torch.