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Current Lead Times: Rider-Ready Framesets: 3 weeks. Full Custom Bikes: 7 weeks.

U.S. Built Bicycles in Titanium and Carbon-Titanium Mix

Rhythms

Seven Entrance

Like a race or really any hard ride, bike building has a rhythm to it. There are times you hammer – pardon the pun – and times you sit in and conserve energy. In a lot of ways, one informs the other. We ride hard as a group, after work on Wednesday nights. We sit in a little, at the office on Thursdays. By Friday morning’s trail ride, we’re ready to rock again.

On cold, wet mornings like today, there is a calm deliberation to our work. The factory is quiet as folks roll in for the day. Coffee gets contemplative as we size up the work to be done. And it’s nice to have that little bit of serenity that comes in the afterglow of a hard ride. It helps you make the right decisions. In these quiet times, you hatch your best ideas.

Finisher's station

As the afternoon slides toward us, the pace picks up. Finished frames find boxes. Delivery trucks pull in and pull out.

Whether you’re working or riding together, pushing and testing each other every day, the pace rises and falls with energy and inspiration. And over time the best always comes out of each of us as we fall into the rhythm of the work, and in large part that’s why we’re so lucky to be able to do what we do.

Group of Nine – Shop Riding

riding selfie

Nine of us out on the shop ride last night. Cross bikes, road bikes, mountain bikes all together. Discovering a new not-so-secret trail and a new little-bit-secret dirt road to link up to our usual trail system, on the way to the path, and the rail bed, and the Battle Road. Kicking up dust the whole time. Trying to keep Dan, on his mountain bike, off the front. Tearing across fields, over bridges. Causing drivers to double-take at the pack of us, worming our way across town from one patch of dirt to the next.

Hammering up the last hill – to take the KOM points that no one awards and no one remembers, except the one who won – and then down into town to contend with cars and bright headlights. Matt S. says, “I don’t even like to ride bikes. I only came for the pizza and beer.”

Photo by Matt O.