Friday, February 20, 2009

Okay, Okay I will post some final pictures :-)

Well I have put another 200 miles on it and it rides like a dream, I will most likely do my logo's as stickers on it soon or airbrush the logo's on...

Don't get to excited about the seat, it is a prototype and I have already taken it off.














Powder coat is awesome... it really makes things look a lot better than they are...







I going to need to think about my cable routing again because this looks good but it still bumps my leg.



Same with this cable route it sits to far out from the head set and makes the cable sit funky...










I still plan to start another frame soon but I am waiting till after NAHBS because I might be able to find some good deals on stuff there or just more creative ideas and what not...

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Looks nice Mark, bet it's nice to ride. Wishing we had some of your weather!
Craig

Unknown said...

Nice buildup. It turned out great. Are you moving on to another one? If you rotated the internal cable routing down a little, do you think that it would work better? Stay in touch, Wil

Mark said...

Yeah I will be starting my next frame after I get back from NAHBS but I am thinking I will do a rigid 29r and delve into a unicrown fork. then I will start on another road bike.

Joe said...

Awesome Mark. Sweet color choice as well.

The lessons I am learning are amazing and really fun to work out...

The pictures below are the work I did last night, finished grinding the bottom bracket sockets.
Notched out the seat stays to fit the drop outs...
And the big big moment... doing my 1st miter on the seat tube (Tim calls this one the most forgiving miter and he is right)

I think that many of the lessons and techniques I have learned from wood working are carrying over into metal working very nicely.

bottom bracket, right side done (before finshing sanding)

bottom bracket, right side done (before finshing sanding)
the left socket is just starting to get ground, notice how thin the walls of the right socket have gotten. there is a lesson there and you will see in following pics!

grinding with a stone

grinding with a stone
it took a while with this stone but with the tight corners I had to use it because I only have one small sand paper bit left

ooh ahhh... a little sparks flyin

ooh ahhh... a little sparks flyin
That lesson I spoke of earlier is happening in this pic...

Ahhh... oh DOH!

Ahhh... oh DOH!
is that blueing? Yup that is the lesson that I learned on this socket. the grinding stone heats the metal very fast and as that wall gt thinner it started blueing. Bad, bad, bad! so I will have to sand and reshape that wall a little because I even got some chipping around the blue.

Chain stays with the drop outs notched in...

Chain stays with the drop outs notched in...
So this one was a little scary because I wasn't sure if I would get them straight and true... it ended up ok but I can do better.

Notching wasn't to hard but keeping everything even was hard

Notching wasn't to hard but keeping everything even was hard
I decided to try the bevel sides on the notch, I think I can do better so I may do the stays again?

The big moment... my first miter!

The big moment... my first miter!
I should have taken some before during and after shots but this went pretty fast actually. this is the ruff cut, I rounded it out better and got rid of that hump on the back wall

A little different angle... check out my home made tube holder... works like a charm!

A little different angle... check out my home made tube holder... works like a charm!
I am so proud of the wood block tube holder... now I just have to make the other sizes

A quick fit test...

A quick fit test...
Not bad forthe 1st miter and fit check... I only need to file the inside edges to match the bevel of the inside of the BB

Nother fit check after some finishing

Nother fit check after some finishing
still need to angle the inside of the edges then it is done and ready for finihsing before brazing. I also still need to finish the socket wall to clean up any uneven edges or tooling marks