Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Pictures and a few words - Devin's frame

If I were building myself a new frame today - I'd do something pretty similar to this (note that I actually am loving my hardtail - another post about that another day).

Devin's frame has:
-100mm fork travel - sort of the standard these days. 80mm just feels like not enough to a lot of folks, myself included. Weird, since I used to ride 26" bikes with 63mm travel SIDs and thought they were awesome. Devin is actually going to use a Fox Talas that adjusts from 95-120mm - so pop the switch, and you change the bike from all-around XC to something a bit more aggro for the big descents.
-Tapered steerer capability. Necessary (Devin's not fat)? No, probably not. But it won't hurt anything, and on the plus side, it'll be wicked stiff.
-Direct mount derailleur. Super smooth shifts. I have actually moved away from doing these for super-short chainstay hardtails, because they've got a lot of dangly bits that get in the way of the tire (bummer) but this is an all-around XC setup with medium/long 44.5cm chainstays, so that's not an issue. And the shifting is excellent.
-Low disc mount dropouts. Easy to work with (win for me), cool to look at, and highly functional. Devin's not running a rack on this bike, but if he was, these would be the choice as well, because the caliper stays out of the way of the rack mounts. Note the downtube brake routing.
-S-bend stays, just to be cool.

New photo location - sort of a mug shot theme, I guess. The garage door is at least white so there's some contrast, but once again, my photography is awful.

6 comments:

Unknown said...

are the headtube rings a new feature?

Walt said...

Good eye. Those actually are the lips of the adapters I use to hold the head tube in the fixture (it wasn't designed with this size of headtube in mind).

So not actually rings. IMO, no need for them. The 44mm head tube stock is heat treated 1.25mm wall - that's beefy enough for pretty much anything.

Fort James said...

Do you need a tapered fork to take advantage of the larger headset?

Walt said...

Hey Ft. James - you can run it with a tapered steerer, or use an inset headset and run a 1 1/8. So it will work either way, though with the inset setup, the stack height is about 10mm lower (so steepens the HTA by half a degree).

It's really intended for a tapered setup, but you can certainly run a non-tapered fork too if needed.

t-roy said...

Sweet ride! You put the direct mount derailleur mount on my short chainstay pisgah slayer machine and it works great. Of course I machined off the dangly unneeded crap on the front derailleur.
I like the idea of the TALAS and may upgrade to one in the future after lil t-roy is born. I find myself running my u-turn around those 2 settings quite a bit. Shorter one on the local xc stuff and climbing in the mtns. Topped out for killing it downhill. Makes sense to me.

Walt said...

Hey Troy -

Yes, the direct mounts are good if you put a cable stop on. The integrated stop is just annoying.

I am loving my Talas fork (on my FS bike). Flip to short travel for climbing, flip to long travel for descending. Super easy.