HOW TO BUILD YOUR OWN BEAUTIFUL BIKE -
More bikes!
==AND bikes/frames for sale==
RECYCLED RECUMBENTS -
This site leads you through my experience for creating a really comfortable LWB (long wheel base) recumbent bike. I use ‘donor’ bikes, usually old and unloved 10-speeds. I strip them down, cut, weld, combine, and augment these frames into a great style of recumbent bike. It tickles me that I am 'recycling' older and unloved bikes into something you or I might ride with passion, comfort, and greater frequency. The methods described here are a hobby or ‘sweat equity’ means of acquiring the best of pedal powered transportation and recreation. This site is one of several I know of that relay the experience of building your own recumbent bike. I am glad you stopped in – my purpose is to persuade you to try this project. You may already be a convert to the idea of riding a recumbent – for anyone who wants to ride a long way, the torture of sitting on a diamond bike saddle is the challenge. Recumbents for me remove that pain, and enhance my joy as a rider.
In your local bike shop, you may also you may be dismayed by the commercial cost of recumbent bikes. It doesn't have to be like that.
The Recycled Recumbent takes some time, ingenuity, and modest resources to build. It doesn't take a lot of cash. It costs you your time and thought - your first bike may take 2-3 weeks to build. The materials are easy – I find donor bikes at rummages and police auctions – the tools take a little doing. This is a brazed or welded assembly, and you need access to that equipment and those skills. I have suggested to some folks - "Buy a $100 class in gas brazing at the local Community College - you get some great skills and access to all the equipment you need to make your own frame this way!"
Objective
The objective of a Recycled Recumbent is a great bike at a modest cost in materials, built with accessible tools and simple technology. It is ALWAYS possible to make a better bike. You can use better tubing. Build completely from scratch. Have me build your frame. Use better and more expensive components. Employ sophisticated machine tools for jigging and alignment. This frame is possible to build well without micrometers and specialty jigs. I make choices for the EZ Clone and Mach 2 that trade costly hardware for home made fabrications. The choices are deliberate, to keep both the costs down and the process accessible.
This modest bike is ‘upgradeable’. Set it up as a 10-speed using components from your donor bikes. If you like what you are riding, buy 'presents' for it. After you ride 500 miles, get it a crank with a granny gear - reward yourself and your bike. Get a really nice rear wheel and tire, maybe with a 7 or 8 speed cassette. Perhaps install a fairing, your second season out. Your riding experience will teach you what your priorities for upgrades are. If you look at my yellowbikes in the pictures, you will see lots of presents... There have been lots of miles to teach me what I wanted, as well.
“(I wish you) Miles of smiles", say some friends of mine. Recumbent riders smile more, because it hurts less.
Workshop Journal
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Toy Shoppe News:
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May 25
A good day. I met Megg at the ferry dock. She brought us 2 bikes - a RANS Stratus that needs a seat, and a Bacchetta Cafe that needs a new ...
Posted May 25, 2012 7:04 PM by Andrew Carson -
May 7
Sunday was a good day! coming soon to the show room (after I get to play with them) - RANS Stratus, Longbikes Slipstream, and Barcroft Virginia!!!!! The Stratus I have had ...
Posted May 7, 2012 5:34 AM by Andrew Carson -
April 9
Darn that real world - a job intruding on all this fun. Just put the first ever MACH 3, a dual 26" wheel Recycled Recumbent, on sale in the show room ...
Posted Apr 9, 2012 6:51 PM by Andrew Carson -
March 16
Scrambling - I've been away almost 2 weeks. Distracted, you might say. Anyway, back today, trying to dig out. Rick, Michell, Mike, Tony, it's coming. Don, thanks for waiting ...
Posted Mar 16, 2012 2:50 PM by Andrew Carson -
Mach 3? Some friends on BROL encouraged me to revisit the idea of a 26x26 form for the Recycled Recumbent. We've been doing just that, and discussing it here - BentRider thread ...
Posted Feb 28, 2012 7:30 PM by Andrew Carson
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