But I can't say no to my "fans" (hang your heads in shame!) so here we go.
-That's a 72 degree seat angle and 61.5cm/24.2" effective toptube for those who don't want to figure things out using front center.
-31.7cm/12.5" BB height assuming big fat 2.5 tires. A bit lower with smaller rubber.
-41cm chainstays (actual, 40.5 effective) and clearance for a 2.4+" tire (a DHF will easily clear with the wheel pulled back a bit). I tried to talk Steve into letting me mess with the driveline since this is a SS-specific frame and he doesn't need/want a bashguard, but he opted to be a little more normal. Otherwise we'd have done 40cm or something.
-Built for a tapered, 120-150mm fork with a tapered steerer and a 30.9 dropper post. I tried to talk him into a stealth but no dice - he already has a non-stealth post and it's hard to argue that a little less visual clutter is worth $300. Note that I usually do 31.6 for droppers but it's just as easy for me to do 30.9 if that's the size you prefer.
-To allow full insertion of the post and get enough tire clearance, I offset the seat tube forward onto the downtube - so on this frame the seat tube and BB shell never meet. A supertherm downtube provides plenty of beef to handle the load.
Steve picked out a really neat avocado-y green color with a low/satin gloss that looks much cooler in real life than in pictures, too.
RAL 6003! |
4 comments:
Whats with all those straight tubes?
Todd
Todd, Walt asked me about curved tubes, I didn't want any. Except for stays (chain and seat), which were absolutely needed for clearance.
Walt, can you elaborate on the driveline trickery? Steve- your bike is SICK!
I like how your definition of "popular request" is one dude double-posting.
And more snark from the other day: now that you offer gravel grinders, I'm wondering if I can order a WW shark-jumping specific bike?
:-P
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