Author: Seven
What Mountian Bike Magazine courtesy of bikeradar.com: Seven Cycles Sola 29 SLX Frame Review
by Justin Loretz
The most comfortable frame I’ve ever ridden and by default the most enjoyable too.
Quality like this doesn’t come cheap, though.
The Holy Grail, the Golden Fleece, the Ark of the Covenant, a basic understanding of the workings of the female mind – man’s search for each of these things is as fruitless as it is eternal. But one item, which until recently was on that very same list, has been found, at least according to What Mountain Bike’s Justin Loretz. He reckons his custom Seven Sola 29er is the most comfortable lightweight hardtail in the world. Here’s why…
The frame
My Sola 29 SLX was born in Watertown, Massachusetts, USA, in a small but perfectly formed workshop in Walnut Street. It’s the place where Seven Cycles reside and perform some pretty clever frame building magic.
When you order a custom frame, you need to know what you want. I love riding hardtails and I knew I wanted a lightweight frame designed for 29in wheels. However, I didn’t want a steep angled, ‘built to ride like a 26er’ bike or one that would jack-hammer my fragile spine to pulp (I’m 40 years old and have two blown/fused vertebrae in my lower back).
Why a 29er? I’ve raced and ridden 29ers side-by-side with scores of 26in wheeled bikes and hands down, a 29er goes uphill faster. I believe it’s down to the way torque is delivered to the rear contact patch, with the larger wheels smoothing out spikes in your power delivery and providing enhanced traction. As a result, you can get away with using a lighter and faster rolling ‘summer spec’ rear tyre all year round. For a cross-country speed demon, this is a win-win situation. Of course, if you’re convinced you want 26in wheels, Seven can do that too.
With help from the guys at Seven I quickly settled on the Sola 29 SLX as being the right base model for me. Light and lithe are the page tabs it’s filed under – perfect for my spinning, accurate and mildly aggressive riding style, but not so good for stiffness obsessed heavyweights. To nail the geometry I measured up a few bikes that I’d ridden and liked for different reasons, namely a Scott Scale 29er and Niner Air 9 Carbon, to boil down my measurements. The geometry had to deliver a ride that was both fast and stable. It had to be able to confidently chase full- suspension bikes down hills and through testing singletrack, and happily drift on loose fireroads.
In the end, I went for a 71.5° seat angle and 68.5° head angle – slack compared to the current trend for 29er front ends that are as steep as those on road bikes, but I prefer to give steering input from the saddle rather than having ‘shopping trolley’ steering at the handlebar. With the guys from Seven I double, triple and quadruple checked everything – never a bad thing to do before the ‘go’ button is pressed, especially on a frame as expensive as this. Undoing welds is nigh-on impossible, so it’s worth getting it right.
With the design nailed all I had to do was wait. And hope. And dream. And then wait a little longer. One thing is for sure – buying custom isn’t for the impatient. Bespoke ‘one bike at a time’ builders like Seven will take the time it requires to do their jobs and that could be a month or it could be three. However long it takes, they’ll keep you informed along the way. Eventually the Seven Cycles box will arrive on the back of the UPS truck and I defy anyone not to have an elevated heart rate and sweaty palms as they pop it open.
As soon as I laid eyes on the raw, unbuilt frame I knew I’d been sent exactly what I’d asked for. The only question that remained was whether its geometry was going to ride the way I predicted it would. I built it up with a 100mm-travel RockShox SID XX fork and SRAM X0/XX bits. Wheels are either Fulcrum XL29s, Bontrager RXL29s or ENVE Carbons depending on the ride/mood I’m in, and finishing kit is a work in progress, with Control Tech Ti Mania and Easton parts popping up, as well as an AX Lightness Daedalus seatpost.
Suffice to say the bike as built is sexy, surgical and sleek. The natural silver-grey sheen of titanium is extremely attractive. When it’s washed it’s like a surgeon’s blade, when it’s dirty it looks like it was made for mud. Dirt just makes it look more handsome – a bit like the rider!
The ride
The ride, the ride… Oh if only I could plug you into my central nervous system. You’d see why I get home late, leave for work early and have an idiotic grin on my chops the entire day. Seven use their lightest Cirrus MTB titanium tubing on the SLX and the way it transmits vibration from the ground to your brain is like nothing else I’ve ever ridden, and I’ve ridden a lot of bikes in 20 years of testing. I was stunned to silence in 20 yards – that’s a new record for me.
The Seven has continued to leave me stunned in the three months and 800 miles we’ve been together. I’ve a mental Rolodex of how hundred of bikes have performed over my standard singletrack test loop. On the Seven, it takes a physical effort to wipe the smile off my face. I’m able to glide over terrain that normally makes hardtails feel hard and harsh, and in the big ring, spinning up what are normally horrible drag climbs I’m able to remain seated instead of resorting to the saddle-hover needed on most other hardtails.
As you turn the pedals you get the standard titanium frame feeling of having half-flat tyres, which takes a bit of getting used to. But there’s more. Seven have created a hardtail frame that feels more like a full-suspension one. When you hit bumps, the frame only transmits what feels like half the impact. It’s not just the rear end that soaks up the hits, either – the front end feels like it stretches a fraction and the whole chassis feels moulded to the ground.
Asked by other riders what the Seven feels like to ride I’ve found myself using terms like alive, dynamic, forgiving, even smooth and plush – two words normally reserved for full-suspension bikes. It doesn’t hurt that it weighs 21lb – a great weight for a 29er, which enables big ring, full gas riding whenever you feel like laying it down. On group rides my buddies now know that if I show up on the Seven they’re in for hurt.
In fact, the only one who’s not getting hurt is me. The comfort of the thin titanium tubes means I can indulge in rides where the time spent riding is the time I have available, not the time I can physically endure. I think comfort as a target for bike manufacturers has long been overlooked. Sure it isn’t as sexy a sell as ‘the stiffest’ but if you can’t bear to sit on the thing after a few hours, what’s the point? Over the course of a long ride it can add up to leave you fresher and more able to belt out the watts when other riders are beaten.
The trade-off is in chassis stiffness. To make a titanium frame that’ll build into a 20lb bike with a focus on comfort, you have to be prepared to give away something. Some would undoubtedly find this specific Sola SLX too soft, but for me it’s as stiff as it needs to be. Hammering it, it doesn’t ghost shift, there’s no brake rub and the frame doesn’t feel mushy. I’d say it’s 95 percent accurate at cross-country speeds.
That percentage would be higher if it had a tapered-steerer-compatible head tube and oversize bottom bracket (since delivery, Seven have begun offering BB30 as an option). But if it had those things, other details like the size and thickness of the main tubes would have to be adjusted and it would be heavier and maybe not as comfortable, getting away from the core reason for doing it this way. Besides, would I really notice the five percent increase in accuracy? Look at it this way: the Sola isn’t anyway near as stiff as my 2011 Niner Air 9 Carbon but it’s three, maybe four times as comfortable. Perfect for me.
I simply haven’t ridden a better bike for my kind of wide ranging cross-country/trail riding than the Seven Sola 29 SLX. A custom frame like this doesn’t come cheap and the top-end build pictured here would cost in excess of £6,000 – enough to buy two or three full-suspension trail bikes. But you can’t judge a bike like the Seven like that. It’s what one of my riding buddies described as the “wife bike” – the one you want to settle down with.
BikeBiz: Seven Cycles expands UK sales network
BikeBiz
by Mark Sutton
‘Largest US custom bike maker’ looks to expand dealer base via Cyclevox
Seven Cycles is to expand its UK operation, having already appointed a number of new dealers alongside UK partner Cyclevox.
Claiming to be the USA’s largest manufacturer of custom bicycles, founder Rob Vandermark now believes that 40 per cent of the brand’s customers reside outside the US.
Vandermark said: “We’ve been travelling to the UK to meet friends and customers more or less from the first day we started building bikes, so there is a natural affinity for us. The roads and weather are a lot like the area we live and work in too, so when we’re building a bike for a customer in the UK we have an intuitive understanding of their needs that we might not have in other parts of the globe.â€
A strong resurgence of interest in titanium bikes has Seven planning for growth, but the veteran frame builder recognizes the need to manage those increased sales carefully. “More isn’t necessarily better, “says Vandermark, “if we can’t continue to deliver on the promise of the custom experience.â€
London retailer and bike fitter Cyclefit is one of the UK stores now on Seven’s books.
Director Phil Cavell said: “Cyclefit has admired Seven from afar for nearly ten years – ever since I wrote the first ever European review on the Seven Axiom in 2002 for Cycle Sport Magazine. We share the same ethic that anything short of perfection is a real shame and an opportunity lost.
“Moreover we commend Seven for their unswerving commitment to craftsmanship and provenance. They, like us, think that where something is made, and the lives of the people that make the products, is crucial to the quality of the relationship the customer enjoys with their bike over time. Cyclefit is excited and proud to be working with Seven Cycles – it has been well worth the long waitâ€.
Bike Radar: Pro bike – Mo Bruno-Roy’s Seven Mudhoney Pro
By Matt Pacocha, US editor, in Madison, WI
When Seven Cycles put Maureen Bruno-Roy (MM racing) on their new prototype carbon fiber and titanium cyclo-cross bike, the top tube said ‘Mohoney’ – a play on the name of their Mudhoney ‘cross line. The Mohoney has since turned into the Mudhoney Pro, which will be a production bike in 2012.
The new bike, which was released as a prototype in October, incorporates additional carbon tubes into its design, when compared to the Mudhoney SLX bikes that Bruno-Roy has ridden for the past four seasons – not just the same model mind you, but the same exact frames.
While the SLX has carbon top and seat tubes, the Pro trades out its titanium seatstays, head and down tubes for carbon as well, in an effort to lighten the frame and further dampen the vibrations that reach the rider, while retaining the terrain hugging suppleness and feel of titanium.
Bruno-Roy’s Mohoney race rig was the first ’cross bike Seven assembled with carbon rear stays, which are an adaptation from the company’s Elium SLX and 622SLX road bikes. “This rear triangle was completely novel for them, in terms of ’cross,†Matt Roy, Bruno-Roy’s husband, team manager and mechanic, told BikeRadar. “So this was the first one and it became the basis for the new Mudhoney Pro.â€
Rob Vandermark, Seven’s founder, laser-cut all of the titanium lugs for the Mohoney frame by hand. On the SLX these lugs are structural but on the Mudhoney they’re there purely for aesthetic reasons, as the carbon tubes are mitered and bonded to each other. The new bike is roughly 1lb lighter than Bruno-Roy’s SLX rigs. “I don’t think they expected it to be that much lighter,” said Roy.
Bruno-Roy’s Mudhoney Pro gets the SRAM treatment, in terms of groupset and accompanying kit – Red with a compact crank and 44-tooth Thorne Components outer ring, and Zipp’s Service Course alloy cockpit. The handlebar is Zipp’s new Service Course CSL, which is made especially for smaller handed riders and has a ‘super-short reach’ and two-degree outward bend in the drops.
A compact gxp crank with 34-tooth sram inner ring and 44-tooth thorne outer ring: a compact gxp crank with 34-tooth sram inner ring and 44-tooth thorne outer ring Mo uses a 44-tooth outer ring. Since SRAM only make a 46t ring, she opts for one from Stu Thorne’s Thorne Products. Also note the ‘late model’ Shimano PD-M970 pedals, which remain more popular on the cyclo-cross circuit than the M980 model due to their better mud performance Deviations from the SRAM brand come in the form of Bruno-Roy’s TRP EuroX Mag brakes and Mavic wheel choices. She has both Cosmic Carbone Ultimate and R-SYS SL tubular models. The former are mostly used with Challenge Grifos (with both standard Challenge and FMB casings), whereas the R-SYS are set for mud with Challenge Limus and FMB Super Mud tires. Roy takes a meticulous approach to the upkeep of his wife’s bikes and it shows through in the finished product. When we saw the bike the day before the USA Cycling cyclo-cross nationals in Madison, Wisconsin it sparkled and gleamed, with touches like fully sealed and shrink wrapped cables, custom stickers on the Fi’zi:k TK saddle and an expertly taped handlebar.
Complete bike specification
- Frame: Seven Mudhoney Pro prototype
- Fork: Seven CX
- Headset: Chris King NoThreadset, 1-1/8in
- Stem: Zipp Service Course SL, 80mm, -6°
- Handlebar: Zipp Service Course CSL, 40cm
- Tape: Fi:zi’k Microtex Bar:tape
- Front brake: TRP EuroX Mag w/ SwissStop Yellow King pads for Mavic wheels
- Rear brake: TRP EuroX Mag w/ SwissStop Yellow King pads for Mavic wheels
- Front derailleur: SRAM Red w/steel cage
- Rear derailleur: SRAM Black Red
- Shifter: SRAM Black Red
- Brake levers: SRAM Black Red
- Cassette: SRAM PG1070, 12-28t
- Chain: SRAM PC1091
- Crankset: SRAM Black Red Compact, 170mm, 44/34t
- Bottom bracket: SRAM Red GXP ceramic
- Pedals: Shimano XTR PD-M970
- Wheelset: Mavic Cosmic Carbone Ultimate (or R-SYS SL w/ mud tires)
- Front tire: Challenge Grifo, 17-21psi, Aquaseal coating
- Rear tire: Challenge Grifo, 17-21psi, Aquaseal coating
- Saddle: Fi:zi’k Aliante Donna K:ium
- Seatpost: Zipp Service Course SL
Critical rider measurements
- Rider’s height: 161.9cm/5ft 4in
- Rider’s weight: 48.08kg/106lb
- Saddle height from BB, c-t: 66.4cm
- Saddle setback: 1.8cm
- Seat tube length, c-t: 50cm
- Tip of saddle to center of bar: 46.5cm
- Saddle to bar drop: 2.9cm
- Head tube length: 9cm
- Top tube length (virtual): 49.5cm
- Total bicycle weight: 7.4kg/16.33lb
Gallery Images
Titanium Seatposts Now Available in 30.9mm
We recently made 30.9mm titanium seat posts available for order.The first production post went to a customer in Belgium who is 6’8″. Doing these larger diameter posts requires that we make a thinnersleeve for the seat tube. Every Seven seat tube gets asleeve, either carbon or ultra-thin aluminum,to keep the keep the post from binding, except, of course, for the integrated seat posts (ISPs) we do for our carbon SLX bikes.
The 30.9mm standard, and indeed the 31.8mm standard, represents a leap forward in the stiffness that can be built into a customer’s bicycle. While we are making 30.9mm posts available for sale, it is important to note that these will only really benefit larger riders.Part of the charm of titanium is that it retains a suppleness that makes it comfortable to ride all day. Over-stiffening eliminates many of the benefits of building in Ti in the first place.
We willalsobe producing a titanium seat post at the 31.8 standard, though not for use with Seven frames, and again, we would only recommend these for larger riders as they are the stiffest, heaviest posts we make.
As with many of the additions we make to our product line, the 30.9mm seat post is a result of customer requests. Larger riders want the benefits of riding a custom, Ti bike, but they are concerned that standard tubing, even with thicker tube walls, won’t produce the long-lasting ride feel they’re looking for. We hope that offering this new, wider post will help them find exactly what they’re looking for.
See the chart for more information aboutseat posts available from Seven, as well as a comparison of the various standards. And click here to order.
Seven Seat Posts
Size/Material | 27.2mm | 30.9mm | 31.8mm | ISP* |
---|---|---|---|---|
Steel | Available | x | x | x |
Ti | Available | Available | x | x |
Ti/Carbon | Available | x | x | Available |
All Carbon | S&SL Models | S&SL Models | x | Available |
Aftermarket | Available | Available | Available | x |
Weight Limit | none | <240lbs | none | <240lbs |
Benefits | Light | Stiffer | Stiffest | Clean Lines |
Considerations | none | Too stiff for lighter riders | Heavy | Hard to travel with |
Weights | 215g @ 280mm; 249g @ 380mm | 221g @ 280mm; 252g @ 380mm | 243g @ 280mm; 287g @ 380mm | Frame Dependent |
* Integrated Seat Post