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

Singletrack Magazine: Boutique Titanium, Seven Sola Reviewed

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Seven Sola

Seven Cycles were born out of ex-employees of Merlin Titanium, (one of the first modern companies to start building with titanium, back in the ’80s). Merlin’s chief MTB designer Rob Vandermark, and several other important folk, left Merlin to set up Seven in 1997 and haven’t really looked back. They initially made just Ti frames, but moved into also making steel and now carbon frames as well. They’re based just outside Boston, Massachusetts.

The Detail

Our test frame is a production Sola frame, but with a custom paint job. Paint is an up-charge option on all Ti Sevens—but you’re equally welcome to leave it bare if you wish. We weren’t that sure about the paint to start with, but stacked against the other Ti bikes on test, it certainly stands out and is a welcome change to the utilitarian dull gray of a plain Ti frame.

For two grand, though, you’d want the beauty to be a lot more than skin deep though. Looking over the Seven, there’s a lot of simplicity and neatness going on. The seat collar is big, but neat. The dropouts are sculpted but not ostentatious and the welds and tube diameters seem ‘just right’.

There’s a lot of titanium bike history gone into this Seven. The tubing is seamlessly double butted and the seatstays feature long ‘S’ bends—both innovations developed while Rob Vandermark was at Merlin. Ironically the ‘S’ bend stays were to increase mudroom but also to give more power to cantilevers. The ‘S’ these days is much longer and results in parallel stays with an elegant kick out at the dropouts. The Sola is Seven’s butted titanium frame (the unbutted Verve is £ 1600) and comes in at barely more than 3Lbs for a 16in frame, so it’s no real surprise that it built into the lightest bike on test.

With our stock Shimano XT build and 80mm Manitou R7 forks, the Sola builds into a bike on the verge of ‘impressively light’ and a lighter, leaner or bigger, chunkier build would be easy depending on your penchant. At around 241lbs though, it felt just right for high speed blasting.

The components are a similar spec to the build on the Moots—good old reliable XT shifters, transmission and brakes, with Shimano XT wheels. They can be run tubeless, but we were keeping to our stock Kenda tires so ran tubes. The only other differences were with a Hope stem and a Thomson seatpost instead of the Moots Ti items on the Moots (there’s something very satisfying about the ‘zzzip!’ of the machined ridges on a Thomson post as it slides into a precisely reamed seat tube.

The paint is very wet looking and obviously many coats thick—this can be easily seen where it ends and the Ti frame starts showing. There’s a I mm step there, protected by a shaped vinyl strip—I suppose there’s not much else they could do here, but it would make sense to get a few spares to protect the vulnerable paint ends from chipping.

The paint has already shown signs of wear, despite helicopter tape in high risk areas. The stop-free center of the top tube is already showing scratching from the brake hose and there are a couple of other scuffs.

The Ride

Like all the bikes here, there is none of the expected ‘angels singing’ ride experience. At their best, all Ti bikes ride like ‘a bike’ and buying one won’t make you a faster rider unless it’s because it inspires you to ride bikes more. The Seven falls into that category. It’s simply a wonderfully inspiring bike to ride.

The light weight of the Seven can be felt in a couple of ways—riders used to regular steel hardtails were climbing hills a couple of gears higher, but those used to more burly trail bikes found the Sola to be just on the edge of ‘too light’ on faster descents as it can get bounced around a little. The racer boy 80mm forks (the other bikes had 100mm) that the frame was designed for meant that the Sola was happier on fast, twisty trails rather than rock fests, but it still coped admirably with some slow, thrutchy stuff. Technical climbs were particularly fun as the combination of light weight and surefootedness made slow and steppy stuff fun again.

Seven Sola Details

In terms of flat-out speed and performance on high speed singletrack, the Sola was a joy to ride. Throw it into comers, lean it over and big ring it out the other side. I even found myself dropping back from the ‘pack’ just so I could wind up another sprint. There was a definite ‘snap’ to the ride and changes in speed just needed a moment’s notice.

The Sola is definitely a bike that won’t let you walk past without an appreciative look and on the trails it won’t let you go home until you’ve gone further than you were intending to. I could fault the scufflness of the paint job, but there’s nothing to stop you saving money and having a bare frame anyway. Besides, if you’re going to have a bike for ten years, it might as well gain a few scars and wrinkles- after all, the owner is certainly going to… which we have been very fortunate to draw upon. Plus, I think there is a very good work ethic out here.”

VeloNews: Mary’s Return

VeloNews Cover

On any other weekend, Vanlandingham’s opening-lap crash wouldn’t have been so costly. But with McConneloug back in North America to race the Quebec World Cup, the margin for mistake proved to be zero. McConneloug has long favored the Mount Snow woods, where she won her first NMBS event on the same course in 2003; the steep climbs and tight singletrack fit her skills perfectly. As she did three years ago, McConneloug used the extended climbs to gain an advantage while riding conservatively on the descents. Despite a strong charge by Vanlandingham that brought her back into second, McConneloug finished nearly two minutes clear.

“I heard the splits on the climb and knew I could take it easy on the descents, not push it too hard,” said McConneloug, who sported some nasty gashes on her left arm and leg from a crash into a barbed wire fence two weeks earlier in Belgium. “I felt really good at Curacao at the first World Cup, and I had some bad luck at the other World Cups, some crashes. I had good legs at those races but once you lose it at the start, you can’t get it back. I was psyched everything went smoothly today.

Mary McConneloug racing

“Vanlandingham, who retained her overall NMBS lead despite her tumble, said not being able to see McConneloug on the climbs made the pursuit tougher. “I lost maybe 30 or45 seconds in the first little loop of the first lap,” Vanlandingham said. “I had to play catch-up, but I never saw her, she got away. She did great, she charged. I’m happy to get second. Besides the beginning I felt great the rest of the race.”

McConneloug Tops Mount Snow

Kenda-Seven racer took lead early and never looked back

In commanding fashion, reigning U.S. National Champion, Mary McConnloug (team Kenda-Seven Cycles), earned her second consecutive victory at the Mount Snow stop of the NORBA National Series this Saturday, June 17. Attacking from the start, Mary took a decisive lead in the first lap that she never relinquished and finished with a nearly two-minute cushion over second place.

Mount Snow is considered one of the most demanding courses in the series. It features approximately 1,000′ of climbing per lap, perilous descents, and ribbons of classic rocky, rooty east coast singletrack. Fresh off of the World Cup circuit in Europe, Mary said of the course, “I’ve always loved racing here.”

In the pro men’s cross-country event, teammate Mike Broderick scored an impressive 13th place, despite a poor call-up position. He and Mary have focused their season on the World Cup and have not contested any of the previous Nation Series races.

Both McConneloug and Broderick have their sights set for next weekend’s World Cup race at Mount Sainte Anne in Quebec, Canada.

Mary at the podium at Mount Snow

Mike Broderick at Mount Snow

Mike Broderick at Mount Snow

26″ vs. 29″ Wheels: Seven Helps Cyclingnews Devise the Ultimate Test

With the help of two identical Seven IMX hardtails, the folks at Cyclingnews are attempting to answer the question, once and for all, “Is bigger better or is less really more?”

While pondered for years, previous attempts to definitively answer the question of whether a 29″ wheel is better than the traditional 26″ mountain bike wheel have failed because of too many variables between the test subjects. So for the first time ever,Cyclingnews and Seven Cycles have removed all variables to create the perfect test.

In describing the two Seven’s, Cyclingnews notes, “We worked closely with the specialists at Seven Cycles to obtain a pair of Seven’s premier carbon and titanium IMX hardtail frames. Seven’s unique talents were tapped to normalize the ride qualities of the two frames by varying the titanium tubing stock as well as the carbon fiber layups, and the handling characteristics were matched as closely as possible.”

“Of equal importance was the fit of the two IMXs and this was calibrated down to the last millimeter relative not only to the rider, but also to the ground. To that effect, critical dimensions such as cockpit length, saddle height and setback, handlebar height and sweep, and even bottom bracket height are 100 percent identical between our decidedly high-zoot test pair.”

Taylor Takes Five at Hartford Crit

Kenda-Seven racer took lead early and never looked back

Riders raced 50 laps on the closed city loop
Riders raced 50 laps on the closed city loop

A very fast one! 50 laps, around a .7-mile loop, with no actual corners, a real “loop”, around Bushnell Park in Hartford, Connecticut. The weather was about as perfect as it’s been since we arrived out East.
Downtowns always look so nice when it’s a holiday weekend, and Hartford was no exception. A beautiful capitol building and the grounds were green and clean.

Mike suited up while the Scrapper and I did our normal routine: check out the competition. The Nerac Team was hosting the race, and so they were out in numbers, as was the Fiordi Fruitti Team. And Colavita’s Italian Stallion: Davide Frattini (whom I did not recognize at first…the blonde bombshell is no longer blonde!). 110 guys lined the start of the Men’s P1/2 race. Luckily the streets were wide and the pavement was smooth!

Seven's Mike Taylor lines up with the 110-strong Pro/1-2 field
Seven’s Mike Taylor lines up with the 110-strong Pro/1-2 field

Race rules read and they’re off! Taylor got a good start near the front of the massive peloton, while the Scrapper and I found a nice resting spot in the shade. (She forgot her sun-screen!) About 7 laps later, my “Seven” rider comes hammering off the front at turn one, leading the way. Suddenly a Colavita guy flies past! Frattini leads the way into turn two with Taylor on his wheel; but soon, with 108 guys chasing, the field was quickly back together.

The bunch was very attentive, and while many riders attempted to escape, no one ever got more than 15 seconds off the front. Right around lap 48, the Fiordi Fruitti 8+ man train took their turn at the front. Taylor quickly took his position behind the train with Frattini hot on his wheel and some Target Training riders in close proximity. The storming peloton was strung out like a snake, and the only guys who weren’t on the train were the ones who got crashed out.

As they turned the last corner, I could see Taylor in the distance. Too excited to see him in the front of the race, I closed my eyes. So I missed one of the “Red men” zig-zagging his bike dangerously across the road in the sprint. Mike finished strong though: 5th place and in the dough!

We celebrated a fine Sunday with a plethora of sushi and beer—and toasted our sponsor/employer (Seven Cycles) for the lovely day!

Scrapper dog
“the Scrapper”