usedtobefast said:i come in at 132, but will be glad to drink beer with you any time.![]()
I got your back brother. Don't make it a double IPA or you may get in my "unfortunate" weight class.
usedtobefast said:i come in at 132, but will be glad to drink beer with you any time.![]()
Reformed said:Ouch. I hope you don't mind us 6-4 plus boys encroaching on your territory. But tell me, it is 12:00 at night, your leaving Chili's, who do you want walking with you in the parking lot, another guy that weighs 150 or a guy that is 6-4 220? : ) Give us a little love, we may help you one day.
I'd disagree with that observation. Sizes in many ranges used to be in 1cm increments in the 80's but with the introduction of the TCR/Compact frame in the 90's Giant tried to narrow it down to as little as 3 or 4. They soon learned that that was too narrow but the damage had been done. Other manufacturers were already following suit. If anything there has been a bounce back towards the older sizing gaps, albeit only to 2cm jumps.Boeing said:However my rather limited observation is that the need for custom frame fabrication is obsolete in the general market place. There are greater variety of sizes including women specific designs in mass production.
Very very true!Never-mind the fact that a rider could get 2 totally different measurements and geometries in separate shops.
Toptube length has always been important, but far too often the STA was ignored when comparing frames. HTA has little if any relevance to fit other than determining if there is toe overlap. BB drop is more of a factor in altering the way a frame handles. If stack & reach are used to compare frames, the BB drop/height is irrelevant for fit purposes.on a side note the problem I had with he custom fitting in the day was there was far too much attention to top tube length and seat tube length. Fitters tended to forget the significance of the HT and ST angles, BB drop etc...IMHO
Notso Swift said:So, let me get this clear... you are contradicting the initial and quite ridiculous statement and recounting with an agreement,![]()
BroDeal said:Ben Serotta was fired from Serotta by the private equity group that recently bought the company. The CEO who ran the company for the last ~9 months was also canned. 40% of the workers were let go a week ago and Mike Lopez, who owns the business in CA that produces Serotta's carbon stuff, says the Serotta has ended its business relationship with him.
I think we can say Serotta is dead.
DirtyWorks said:The dealer vs. direct plan is a hard one. . .
hiero2 said:Yeah - but I noticed in the Serotta rep repost that they addressed this by going MSRP strictly for factory direct. That takes most of the sting out of factory-direct competition, but allows the LBS unhappy customer, the no-nearby-LBS, and the hard to fit a place to land.
Just noticed - this is an update on a 2 yr old thread. Hmmm - well - my comment fits in a general sense anyway.
durianrider said:If you aint building 800g carbon frames in China --- then your cycling frame company will prolly go bust in 2013.
durianrider said:If you aint building 800g carbon frames in China --- then your cycling frame company will prolly go bust in 2013.
Giuseppe Magnetico said:Wow, you should let your compatriots Darrell Llewellyn and Darren Baum know that their shops are going to close down this year. I'm sure they'll be relieved to hear the news from you.![]()
Boeing said:Concur however to make this a little more constructive. At Least we wont have to see frames made to a ridiculous top tube length and absurd steep head angle and slack seat angle because a shop bike fit kit guru fit guy and rider misunderstood the basic geometry performance in favor of alleged stretched out comfort.
not a slam on Ben and his company. a slam to the bike shops misusing the fit bike.
A lot of those Serotta customers simply got old.BroDeal said:On the former Serotta's forum, now the Paceline, there is a thread, titled "Honoring a great brand," filled with pics of people's Serottas. After looking through that thread I understand why Serotta died. There are more hideous stem extensions and angled stems than you can shake a stick at. It looks like a good percentage of the members were fitted by Rivendell's Grant Peterson School of Bike Fit, also known as Ol' Hike Those Bars U. While I realize that you could probably make a similar thread about ugly Treks or Specializeds, when a large portion of a company's bikes that people see look faster backwards then the company has a problem.
ustabe said:A lot of those Serotta customers simply got old.
I'm seeing a disproportionate number of Serottas come through our shop with flat bars, riser stems, stem extensions, and fat-**** saddles. And I need to plead guilty for helping some of them along, especially by fitting longer brake and shift cables.
My guess is that most guys who think they're too old for the Tarmac simply sell it or give it to their kids, and buy a new hybrid for themselves. The Serotta owners have so much invested in these bikes that they'd rather fred them up than give them up.
Serotta's market simply eroded out from under them. With Di2, EPS, 1000 gram wheelsets, and extra-hyper modulus carbon all competing for the dollars of performance oriented professionals, plus the diminishing of that customer base either through age or recession, high performance custom frames just became de-prioritized.
Giuseppe Magnetico said:Agree with everything you pointed out there except for that last bit. I've never seen so many custom builder's bikes represented at races than in the last few years, seems to be growing. Must be a geographical thing.
ustabe said:A lot of those Serotta customers simply got old.
I'm seeing a disproportionate number of Serottas come through our shop with flat bars, riser stems, stem extensions, and fat-**** saddles. And I need to plead guilty for helping some of them along, especially by fitting longer brake and shift cables.
My guess is that most guys who think they're too old for the Tarmac simply sell it or give it to their kids, and buy a new hybrid for themselves. The Serotta owners have so much invested in these bikes that they'd rather fred them up than give them up.
Serotta's market simply eroded out from under them. With Di2, EPS, 1000 gram wheelsets, and extra-hyper modulus carbon all competing for the dollars of performance oriented professionals, plus the diminishing of that customer base either through age or recession, high performance custom frames just became de-prioritized.
Bustedknuckle said:They completely ignored economy of scale. They also forgot, 'do one(or 2) things and do them well. They were and could have been again, successful at all steel and ti frames, and stay small-mid sized. But Ben never saw a bike design 'gizmo' he didn't like plus he thought he could expand to the 2000 frames+ per year level. Rear suspension on road frames(Moots), carbon plugs in ti(Seven), carbon **** ends(lots), carbon(lots). They became succesful on steel and ti, competitve and well made. When driving, Ben let the wheels come off.
Many small-ish US frame builders are wildly successful. IF, Moots, Seven, Parlee(altho they are off shore with some) come to mind. Baum, Storck, others also do well in the 'high performance custom frame', department but is that market small? Sure, Builders need to recognize that and not try to be or compete with trekspecializedgiant. Be what they aren't.
DirtyWorks said:I didn't see this in the thread: Ben wasn't paying at least some of his employees.
http://saratogaindecline.blogspot.com/2013/08/media-darling-serotta-cycles-will-cease.html
When they WERE paid, it wasn't much. Which is typical. Lots of guys can do the material joining, few can turn it into a branded business.
That Zinn article really makes it sound like nothing was going on when Zinn got started. That was *totally* untrue. But, if you are out to inflate the Zinn brand, it does sounds better.