All right Mr. De Mille, I'm ready for my close-up...
Edit: Damn, Richard called my bluff!
I better get to typing....
All right Mr. De Mille, I'm ready for my close-up...
Edit: Damn, Richard called my bluff!
I better get to typing....
Last edited by Archibald; 11-20-2010 at 07:54 PM.
dwf - the most important man in framebuilding atmo.
That's it, that's all we get? A picture of Don hugging his tool?
Eric Doswell, aka Edoz
Summoner of Crickets
http://edozbicycles.wordpress.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edozbicycles/
In Before the Lock
Don,
You are a hero to most.
Can you please share with us how you went from jumping out of planes honorably at the service of the United States of America to becoming a Master Craftsman?
Thank You,
Justin
Thanks Justin, but I don't consider myself a master craftsman at anything. Jack of all trades is closer to the mark.
I'll try to compress a lifetime into a paragraph or two. I worked in machine shops as a kid (Dads, etc.) I began learning to weld at a very young age; I think I was 12 when I started to actually get paid to do it, as I recall it was welding angle clips on boiler tubes with 7014. No matter but it gave me a taste for it and I liked having $$ in my pocket so the rest of my school years I always had a job. Sometimes two. I was heavy into bikes, motorcycles, cars and all things mechanical from about the 3rd grade on. It's just the environment I was raised in. I hated machining, I thought it was boring, and nobody wanted to be that kid that smelled like coolant all the time but with welding you could set the world on fire. From 16 years old on, I lived on my own, had a full time job, a place to live, and somehow managed to finish High School.
I had a bad temper and worse judgement; my Dad always said I could get in a fight just looking at somebody across the street. I started bouncing around from one scrape with the law to the next, and one day I found myself in Cleburne, Texas standing in front of a military recruiting center. Smartest thing I ever did was breaking the cycle I kept finding myself in. I loved the Army, I loved my job, and was good at it; it was like boy scouts for men with merit badges for blowing shit up. When I got out, I was recruited to work on DOS jobs in US Embassies, first in Mexico City, then Chad. Good times. From there, I was recruited to work in the US Antarctic Program which I did for the next 9 or so years. During that time I moved out of construction management and into operations and then upper management and when I left I was the Sr. Area Manager for all three US Antarctic Stations (McMurdo, South Pole, and Palmer)
Around 1998/99 I traded what I felt was a corporate straight jacket for something that didn't fit so tight, went to UBI where Ron Sutphin & Jim Kish changed my life, started Anvil Bikeworks, and the rest is history.
I didn't choose to do what I do today, it chose me. I love it until I hate it and then I love it some more.
Wake up Justin, the opera is over.
I'm interested in your framebuilding as well. How much framebuilding do you do as opposed to the tooling side of your business?
Eric Doswell, aka Edoz
Summoner of Crickets
http://edozbicycles.wordpress.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edozbicycles/
In Before the Lock
Unfortunately, very little these days. I build just enough to keep the heavy rust at bay. Building bikes is kind of like riding them: you might get fat & slow but you don't forget how.
The tooling took over my business in 2004...actually before that, but I quit taking orders in 2004. I always though building frames and building tools would be a good mix but it's more like oil & water. In 2004 I finally faced up to the fact that all I could do was piss everybody off by being late with both bikes and tools. I can tell you it was a hard decision to quit building. Like I said before, I never started Anvil to be a tool builder, it's just the way it shook out. My first bike show I displayed at I took my fixtures to use as backdrops. My frames could just as well have been made out of glass, everybody looked right through them and all the questions were about the tools. I sold my first frame fixture that day.
don,
give us a little time line of yr manufacturing.
i assume you started building frames and then expanded into tooling.
what brought you into the tooling side?
Thanks Steve. It's as I posted to Ed. I did start building frames and to do that I had to build fixtures first (I'll see if I can find pics of them later). I built the first "Master" fixture designed for resale in 2000 I think. The original 10 Masters were all done on my old turret mill, and old rotary table, and lathe. I'd work the long days showing those things who was boss. I'd really explore the room on what was possible to do on that damn mill. Ram all the way out & rotated off to one side. Table all the way to the opposite lock so I swing the radius's I needed to cut on the rotary. Those original masters were HUGE too. 8 setups per side working off pins and two rotary table ops and every move was impending doom. Good times! The original Journeyman made its debut at Interbike '03. I didn't think I'd sell 10 of those JMan's; it was just do different than everything else; hell I didn't even keep serial numbers on the first 100-odd units that I did!
When is the Anvil three axis adjustable front derailleur braze on boss jig going to be in the mail to me?
I demand to know
My Anvil Forky brazio jigio is a nice tool, thank you Don
Cheers Dazza
The rock star is dying. And it's a small tragedy. Rock stars have blogs now. I have no use for that kind of rock star.
Nick Cave
www.llewellynbikes.com
The usual Facebook page
https://www.flickr.com/photos/llewellyncustombicycles/
Darrell Llewellyn McCulloch
let's hear about the artic thing, too
and vee dubs and whisky
a thanksgiving tale, uncle donny!
Steve Hampsten
www.hampsten.blogspot.com
“Maybe chairs shouldn’t be comfortable. At some point, you want your guests to leave.”
Whisky is a three letter word: Rye!
VW's: a story of progression....
first there was this:
Then there was this:
With this:
and this:
but it's really about this:
then there was this:
and that was buffed into this:
now there's this:
and who knows what it will look like next year! Probably the same.
Crap, what was Antarctica like? Besides cold. I've always wanted to see it in person.
Eric Doswell, aka Edoz
Summoner of Crickets
http://edozbicycles.wordpress.com/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/edozbicycles/
In Before the Lock
Highest, driest, coldest, land on Earth pretty much captures it. Other than that it was party time!
The Antarctic Cycling & Drinking Club circa early 90's (I'm in the middle, green jacket, blue pants):
Airing it out in McMurdo!
Pancake ice on the way to Palmer Station after the Drake Passage
Hero shot at South Pole. We were digging out arches and the dome this year:
Hero shot my first year on the ice/McMurdo building the water plant and fire hydrant system (hot water!)
Last edited by Archibald; 11-20-2010 at 09:27 PM.
don- it's a not so secret secret that you're still making the occassional bike. so spill- rumor has it these things are for people not comfortable enough with their own sexuality to wear Lycra bib shorts, but might want to smethimg crazy like ride the colorado trail unsupported.
where do you see bike design going in the next few years? what the fuck is the modern mountain bike? and given fxture sales, what's the state of the handmade bicycle industry? and last one, what's the best 1915 for shooting cans or other threats to my personal safety?
Yeah. Entropy as a brand is pretty stagnant, as much as I'd like to, I just don't have time to make a go of it, and am too much of a control freak to not do it myself. But hey, Nancy is pretty awesome. I've never quit designing bikes & bike stuff, but turning it from design to reality is the show stopper for me so it comes down to the occasional special bike. I'm really tempted to hire another guy for the tooling biz and delegate day to day ops to my main man Matt but as Carl Strong told me (and apparently everybody now -- he used to make me feel so special!) that when he expanded, he handled more money and managed more risk, but he didn't MAKE more money. That's damn good cautionary advice to me. Right now, Anvil is a very healthy, sustainable, business that provides a very good living for three folks if you don't mind working 50 hours a week. This year I've focused a lot on increasing our capacity and capabilities (new VMC and other equipment, and more space) so that means we should see some increased efficiency next year, but again, it's a double edged sword. The new VMC is a very good example. It rips through product compared to our older stuff, but to take advantage of it, we have to make new sub-plates and fixturing to hold the parts, which means instead of saving us time it's taking about twice the time. The gain will come later. Shit, I'm rambling! What were we talking about again?
Dinner is ready, so I'll finish this up later!
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