e-richie-
have you ever been to ess-a-bagel on 21st and 1st? do you think it's the quintessential ny bagel?
what percentage of your customers ask the classic sachs red/white painted frame?
cheers-
Ess-a-open, sir.
Welcome to Ess-a-Bagel Online
They make a decent steamed bagel.
atmo-san,
I read somewhere that your cross bikes are constructed with lighter-weight tubing than your road bikes. Could you comment on that, as well as any other non obvious differences between the road and cross bikes?
Domo.
ya for the past 3 seasons i have used the spirit-for-lugs (aka PegoRichie) tube sets in the lighter version. the difference between the team 'cross frames and the road frames i make for paying clients revolves around details and tolerances. i batch build all the sponsorship frames/forks and do not do much finish work, if any at all. they look nice, and folks would look at them and assume some care was taken, so we'll leave it at that. these bicycles are tools; much more so than any road frame i would sell regardless of whether it's even ever raced. since i make then en masse (that's french for in massachusetts) i can cut a few corners along the way, gain some workplace efficiency with a process or six, and work through assembly and sequencing ideas or stumbling blocks i may be having on the road frames i get paid for atmo.
Last edited by e-RICHIE; 01-16-2011 at 10:32 PM. Reason: grammar
Hey Richie,
Are/have there been clients you have looked forward to or got excited about building a bike for or are you always somewhat removed?
thanks for all of this,
shaner
the framebuilding excites me atmo. it's an organic, confounding process atmo. much more so than ever, though i am also more familiar with the nuances with each build. so again, the process excites me; the people are simply the part of the equation that allows the commerce to continue so that i can have something to do. i have made a lot of great and some not so great personal connections from being in business, but i was never driven so much by the client as much as by the framebuilding. i make these for myself, and make them just to make them. period.
I didn’t know it at the time, but my first bicycle came in the waning years of a sort of revolution. Over the decade The Beatles played together – from 1960 to 1970 –the American bike market grew slowly from 3.7 million bicycles sold annually to 6.9 million. But three years after the group’s breakup, the world was a different place. Credit the oil crisis or a cultural shift, in 1973 Americans bought 15.2 million bicycles, and sales were only growing. England produced some of the best examples and so, for reasons of business-minded optimism, wanderlust, or perhaps ennui, a handful of young Americans crossed the Atlantic to learn the trade of frame building
read the rest here atmo.
this is awesome atmo -
brian and chris at circle a restored an old RS frame from 1978/1979 or so.
it's the 602nd RS branded frame made.
here, look: AutoViewer : Greg's Richard Sachs repaint
i also mined these pics:
Don't know if this has been asked, but what became of the first 5 frames you built under your own name?
I had a mid to late 70s Masi GC, from California, in that color blue.
Sweet!
Blue is the new red...
Richard - when you are bored and feel like typing. Is there a time line when you switched from the solid "RS" on the fork crown to the double lined "RS" as on the bike you pictured?
here's a scan of notebook one - i found two of these because iirc i started it over when i realized composition books would last longer than spiral bound pads. at some point i must have transcribed all of it over. the notes show the specs of the first-ever RS frames as they were then recorded. number 85 was the first one sold for money. the first 10 were on display at the 1976 international cycle show held that february at the coliseum on columbus circle. frame number 105 (the tenth frame...) was a track frame, shown unpainted so folks could ogle the brazing and filing, was stolen one night while we were there. i dunno/remember who recycle is but it's the name of the shop that bought the first frame a season or two after i used it racing. lmk if you have any questions.
large
original
richard
how has the move from chester -> warwick affected your business? (forgive me you answered this in the other 16pages of text)
d
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