Showing posts with label custom steel frame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label custom steel frame. Show all posts

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Inspiring Correspondence

Here is some correspondence that we received recently from a fellow member of the cycling community, which needs no further introduction from us.

The accompanying pictures were provided by RW of his 1994 Bilenky Signature Tourlite.

Thank you. Keep sending us this great stuff.

- BCW

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Dear Steve Bilenky & the Whole Bilenky Team,

I just wanted to reach out and thank you for your wonderful work in metal.  I’m looking forward to reading the review of your tandem in the upcoming Bicycle Quarterly.

I am aware of your factory and some of your philosophy, which I call rebuilding an older mode of transportation over the ashes of a newer one.
Anyway, I just love your dedication to MAKING THINGS.  I, too, love to make things.  I have recently completed assembling my own bicycle on a Velo Orange Polyvalent frame (except for the arduous task, for a novice, of fishing the wiring for the headlight from the dynamo hub through the front fork & up through the fender).  Yes, I learned how to lace and true wheels, although I finally got so frustrated with the finicky details, I had the bike shop give the wheels their final tensioning.  And I have enough bike tools that I guess my NEXT bike will be RELATIVELY inexpensive!

As I say to people who look at me, astonished, and say, “You built your own bicycle?”, I say, “Well, I only built it out of PARTS, I didn’t build it out of ROCKS.”  The parts are designed to fit together!  I am sure you are very aware of that great little book, The Toaster Project, and REALLY building something out of rocks!  If we can see farther, and do more, it is only because we stand on the shoulders of giants.
 
Imagine all of those toiling, dirty, sweaty, hot metal smiths of the distant past, in front of their kilns and banging on their anvils, each one perhaps adding one little improvement to metalworking, making metals more pure, coming up with new alloys, making a more resilient sword or shield, making lots and lots and LOTS of mistakes along the way, but a few of those mistakes turning out to be advances in the craft.
I was (and am) a woodworker, and I felt a kind of snobbish distaste for metal.  But then I got into building this bicycle and gained a whole new appreciation for metal, and I’m no longer a metal snob.  Indeed, I desperately crave a nice used metal lathe.  I know I’m rambling here, forgive me, but perhaps you are aware of the Cole Porter song, “It’s De-Lovely!”?  In the preamble to the song, the woman begins,
     “I feel a certain urge to sing/
      The kind of ditty that invokes the Spring!”

With my fetish for a metal lathe, I want to sing,
     “I feel a certain urge to knurl…”

But I haven’t thought of a good word to rhyme with knurl!  I have the complete sets of the Popular Mechanics Do-It-Yourself Encyclopedia, both the 1954 and 1968 editions, and in both sets, it seems you just couldn’t be a “real man” unless you had a metal lathe in the basement!  Amazing how much the idea of DIY was much more prevalent earlier in the last century.  I’m glad you are bringing back the art of craft.  Craft is good.  The work of hands is good!
I actually have an idea for a garden implement that I am going to fabricate from 3/4” copper pipe that I think might even be patentable (in my fondest dreams!), and I’m looking forward to designing and redesigning and building it.  And I also have an idea for a backpack frame that might be workable.

Anyway, in this age of electronics, which is also building things, and I’m not an electronics snob either, and in fact I want to learn all about electronics and maybe build a simple computer, or perhaps you are aware of the factoring machines that use rotating chains to find prime numbers….
As I was saying, before I got distracted there, in this age of electronics and social media, I just want to congratulate you on building things that are so beautiful, so spare, and yet so efficient, effective and useful!  And I hope my next bike will be built around a Bilenky frame!

Thanks for reading through this screed, and, basically, just thank you for all you do!

David
Washington, D.C. & Charlottesville, Va.

Friday, January 17, 2014

January Sale: Special Frame Offers

We have a number of unique, special edition Bilenky frames for sale, including several new frames not previously listed. These are either ex-demo bikes, were built for customers who later changed their mind (it happens), or are other special productions for various reasons...

For our 2014 January Sale, we're offering the demo frames at discounted prices for the next few weeks only - jump on them now as prices will go back up in February. This is a rare opportunity to get a handmade custom Bilenky frame at a significantly discounted price.

• Customised Build Kits (whole or partial) are available for all of these frames - just give us a call to discuss what you have in mind. Headset and BB? Full build? No problem.

• Individual Payment Plans (at 0% interest) or layaway instalments can also be offered for these frames - again, call us to work something out.

The following one-off frames are available at one-off sale prices:


White 46cm Expedition Tourer with Titanium Fork (NEW)

• super versatile 26" wheelset frame, with clearance for up to 26x1.95 tires with fenders
• lightweight tubeset in unground fillet-brazing, with ovalized downtube for added strength
• curved toptube to allow extra standover for off-road riding
• Paragon dropouts with removable derailleur tab and Rohloff OEM2 axle-plate mount
• fender and rear-rack mounts, cantilever brakes, lovely white pearl powdercoat
• rare Kona P2 titanium fork or buy it without the fork
An ideal frame for the smaller 5'2"-5'6" rider for bikepacking - just load it up and hit the gravel trails...
$1750 frame only
$1950 frame and ti fork

Light green 62cm Track Frame & Fork
• large 700c lightweight track frame
• beautiful two-tone custom paint with Sachs lugs and painted cut-outs
• chromed drops and tips of stays on fork
• rare Reynolds curved seat-tube
More pictures of this frame at the BCW webstore.
$2500 > $2250



Black 60cm Single-Speed/Internal Gear cruiser (NEW)

• 700c frame only (no fork included; we can build you one as an extra...)
• custom 'Helenic' seat-stay cluster, with elegant curved seat-stays
• satin black powdercoat finish with red decals
• mounts for a chain-guard and long-reach sidepull brakes
Would build up to an awesome and unusual roadster or city bike.
$1000 > $775


54cm (Medium) Adventure Touring Frame with S&S couplers for global travel
• price includes a single-color powdercoat of your choice
• frame is fully finished and can be delivered with paint within 3 weeks
• frame has rack and fender braze-ons and S&S couplers already installed
• includes a stock fork to match
• clearance for 26x1.5 tires with fenders
Based on our time-proven Midlands geometry - this will build up into a versatile off-road adventure touring machine. Choose the color and you're ready to go!
$1900 > $1750   Update 1/22 - FRAME SOLD.



46cm Green Roadster / Light Touring Bike
• Lightweight Columbus Zona tubing
• Pacenti fork crown with pin-striping
• custom green paint with handpainted Bilenky graphics
• horizontal drop-outs with derailleur tab
• clearance for 26x1.5 tires with fenders
• pump-peg, braze-ons for racks and fenders, takes long-reach sidepull brakes
$2250 > $1750

Call us for more details or pictures of these frames.

-BCW