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Thread: Vertigo Cycles

  1. #41
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Sean,

    Thanks for your thoughtful reply. I agree with your comments regarding cars, especially the Miura!

    Please post pics of the new 29er that you finished recently, I know I would like to see it, along with everyone else.

    Conor



    Quote Originally Posted by VertigoCycles View Post
    Aesthetically I like simplicity, neatness, space and contrast. The expanding seat mast insert was born from that. I preferred the ISO disc caliper mounting style (which is fairly easy to tuck between seat and chain stays) but when my favorite disc brake company, Hope, switched to all post mount calipers, I started putting posts on MTBs to eliminate the adapter whenever it was practical to do so. My obsession with hidden cables is born from that aesthetic as well. I take it as far as I can on my personal bikes but the cost at the customer level for a full works frame is something most don't go for so I usually work with them to trim it down to something more practical.



    When I was a kid I lusted for cars that I would likely never see on the road in my lifetime. Lamborghini hit me especially hard. The graceful curves of the Miura always stuck with me as did the Ferrari Testarossa from the late 50's. I carved a pine box derby car to look like the Testarossa when I was in cub scouts (that was a lesson in what could be accomplished with a pocket knife and I have a scar to show for it). The shape of the seat and chain stays on my road and cross bikes are an attempt to emulate those curves.

    I was also a huge fan of the Countach and LM002 though I think any styling cues that could come of those two would look hideous on a bike.



    I'm a fan of 29ers and might not be the right person to ask, but I think they're here to stay. Tire and fork manufacturers are on board, rims have always been easy but more and more companies are offering beefy rims and there are a handful of DH guys who have been dabbling in bigger wheels for a handful of years. They do have drawbacks, though I think they're insignificant, and they're not for everyone. I definitely poo poo'd 29ers when I first became aware of them but I'm obviously a convert, expecially now that I have one with a chainstay length I like AND a front derailleur. 650B...what's that? You never know. I don't think they'll replace 29ers but if tire makers think they can make money with them I'm sure we'll see more of them. They're only marketing $$ away from taking over the world ;)



    I finished it last month. It was the 29er with the swoopy seat stays, PF30 and internal everything routing. It sounds cheesy when I hear the words in my head but that bike is my dream bike. I executed everything that I wanted to accomplish which presented me with a bunch of "problems" to solve and setups to consider. The blueprint for this bike was conceived in my head years before I learned to cut and weld metal and for me, this is "IT".

  2. #42
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    I'm pulling this out of the ashes to share a very small project.

    I needed some tensioners for a bike I'm taking to NAHBS and couldn't find anything that worked with Paragon horizontal drops AND looked good. These were born.



    I'm going to do a batch of them once I recover from NAHBS. They'll be available with ti or chromoly skewers and in black or silver anodization. Anyone who wants fancy colors should contact me with a request. If I get enough requests for specific colors, I'll do them.

    Sean
    Sean Chaney
    www.vertigocycles.com
    a peek behind the curtain

  3. #43
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Those are super hot!

  4. #44
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    There's a Vertigo up for sale in the classifieds. Go get it. I'm only taking two more orders before I close the books until 2013.

    Also, check out Privateer Magazine Issue #3. I was very fortunate to be interviewed for a piece.
    Sean Chaney
    www.vertigocycles.com
    a peek behind the curtain

  5. #45
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Quote Originally Posted by VertigoCycles View Post
    I'm pulling this out of the ashes to share a very small project.


    I'm going to do a batch of them once I recover from NAHBS. They'll be available with ti or chromoly skewers and in black or silver anodization. Anyone who wants fancy colors should contact me with a request. If I get enough requests for specific colors, I'll do them.

    Sean
    will those hold a QR in a horizontal dropout with a big boy standing on them? Coolio! - Garro.
    Steve Garro, Coconino Cycles.
    Frames & Bicycles built to measure and Custom wheels
    Hecho en Flagstaff, Arizona desde 2003
    www.coconinocycles.com
    www.coconinocycles.blogspot.com

  6. #46
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Those are absolutely beautiful. Clean, clean, clean!

  7. #47
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Quote Originally Posted by steve garro View Post
    will those hold a QR in a horizontal dropout with a big boy standing on them? Coolio! - Garro.
    They haven't been put through the paces yet as I haven't had the time to devote to getting them produced other than this one pair. The ends are 7075 and there's about 30% more thread depth on the threaded end than on a normal skewer, they're also a bit bigger in diameter. In theory, yes, but I don't know fo sho.
    Sean Chaney
    www.vertigocycles.com
    a peek behind the curtain

  8. #48
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Quote Originally Posted by VertigoCycles View Post
    They haven't been put through the paces yet as I haven't had the time to devote to getting them produced other than this one pair. The ends are 7075 and there's about 30% more thread depth on the threaded end than on a normal skewer, they're also a bit bigger in diameter. In theory, yes, but I don't know fo sho.
    If so I'll buy a couple set - give 'em some R&D - shit, send a pair to Bellman - he's a big boy who pedals hard, 8th overall in creampuff......
    - Garro.
    Steve Garro, Coconino Cycles.
    Frames & Bicycles built to measure and Custom wheels
    Hecho en Flagstaff, Arizona desde 2003
    www.coconinocycles.com
    www.coconinocycles.blogspot.com

  9. #49
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    I haven't posted in this thread for way too long. More than two years...ouch!

    Since it's semi-relevant and because I'm stuck in the house listening to a sick toddler make a feeble attempt at napping maybe a little blurb on my weld prep procedure would be entertaining (for me, I highly doubt any non builder gives much of a damn, especially after that Guru bullshit)

    Firstly, let me say that it's my goal to avoid any post-weld surface finish work other than decal application and "headbadge anodization". This is almost entirely for my own amusement but also because it's quite time consuming to attempt to get all the Scotch Brite scratch marks oriented around the circumference of joined tubes. I'd rather drive myself nuts attempting to weld a perfectly clean frame than drive myself nuts attempting to deal with scotch brite strips on a completed frame. It's also a point of pride for me. I go to great lengths to do as much work as necessary on the front end of a process to ensure a smooth process and time savings on the back end.

    All tubes are rough cut to length.
    Tubing for the stays is bent, formed (chainstays) and then polished with a grey belt on a dynafile (O.D) and a stainless brush (I.D)
    The chainstays get washed with Dawn in the sink and then dried on a heater.
    All parts for the DO/CS/BB subassembly are polished, vent holes are drilled and deburred (VERY important), washed with Dawn and then they go in the ultrasonic cleaner
    DO/CS/BB sub assembly is welded and generally looks like this:






    Once that assembly is finished, the seat tube gets mounted in a lathe, dynafiled on the O.D., hit with a scotchbrite tampon on the I.D. and washed in Dawn. The seat collar is similarly cleaned and then they take a cozy bath in the ultrasonic and then dry out on a heater. Once they're nice and dry they're welded together and then onto the BB shell which looks something like this:



    With that sub assembly done, the seat stays get polished and cleaned in a similar fashion and then both ends are mitered and welded onto the existing assembly.



    The seat stay bridge is then dealt with in a similar fashion...can you see where this is going? Once the back end is done, I build out the front end, which is so ridiculously fast that it's like finishing up a mountain bike ride with a ten mile swoopy, burmed downhill.

    many steps were skipped, purging, alignment checks, bath chemistry, vent strategery, torch modifications and self made tools were all involved.

    That's about as much time as a sick kid affords...more later. I'll try to keep the post interval a bit shorter this time.
    Sean Chaney
    www.vertigocycles.com
    a peek behind the curtain

  10. #50
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Quote Originally Posted by VertigoCycles View Post
    Once the back end is done, I build out the front end, which is so ridiculously fast that it's like finishing up a mountain bike ride with a ten mile swoopy, burmed downhill
    Awesome post! I really like that analogy too. I just built my first one from the back forward and noticed the same thing!
    -Adam Sklar
    Sklar Bikes LLC
    http://sklarbikes.com
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  11. #51
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    Thanks for sharing Sean. Good to see the Vertigo thread revived. Curious for an update on torch modifications and "Theories on Vent Strategery".
    Kristofer Henry : 44 BIKES : Made to Shred™
    www.44bikes.com · Flickr · Facebook · Instagram

  12. #52
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    Default Re: Vertigo Cycles

    woah, three and a half years.

    Most of what I do is similar to the one before it, so I've been loath to flood the internet with photos of work in progress. I built a little gizmo in the late hours over the past few days that will be offered as an option for new XTR Di2 bikes next year. It's a display unit delete that integrates into the bottom of the steerer. I've been wanting to get rid of it since I unboxed it several years ago...didn't everyone pull the gear indicators off their shifters?

    At least for this prototype, a Pro Tharsis stem was used because the wire ports are already built into it and it has a nice headset compression adjustment system built into it. It's been installed on the bike for a few years and it's actually plenty light while managing to do an admirable job of connecting the handlebar to the steerer.

    The XTR head unit was replaced with a Dura Ace RS910 and my little slug encapsulates it and presses into the bottom of the steerer.

    XTR Di2 Display Unit Delete by Sean Chaney, on Flickr

    XTR Di2 Display Unit Delete by Sean Chaney, on Flickr

    XTR Di2 Display Unit Delete by Sean Chaney, on Flickr

    XTR Di2 Display Unit Delete by Sean Chaney, on Flickr

    XTR Di2 Display Unit Delete by Sean Chaney, on Flickr
    Sean Chaney
    www.vertigocycles.com
    a peek behind the curtain

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