Clydesdales/Athenas (200+ lb / 91+ kg) - Custom for this Clydesdale

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View Full Version : Custom for this Clydesdale


Sassonian
01-04-10, 08:34 PM
Hi

After many years of drooling over a custom built Zinn - I finally own one.

http://adrian.mydnd.com/images/SideSmall.jpg

I wrote a review of it for a local cycling site here in NZ - which gives the full details...

http://roadcycling.co.nz/GearTalk/project-big-a-custom-zinn-experience.html

A few weeks on from that - I still can't say enough about it.

If you want to go faster - and you're tall - then have a good look at this.

Cheers

Adrian.


Wavy
01-04-10, 09:12 PM
Sweet!

Congratulations

10 Wheels
01-04-10, 09:13 PM
Very nice....


Mr. Beanz
01-04-10, 10:33 PM
WHOAH! How tall are you?:D

Sassonian
01-05-10, 11:52 AM
WHOAH!

How tall are you?

6'7" and 275lbs. It's got custom built 210mm cranks that mean I can finally use my long levers to full effect. It's meant a huge jump in performance. The bottom bracket is built higher off the ground to accommodate the long cranks.

Mr. Beanz
01-05-10, 11:55 AM
Cool! Nice bike, but glad I'm a shorty at 6'1.:D That would be way out of my league and budget!:thumb:

LeeG
01-05-10, 12:51 PM
6'7" and 275lbs. It's got custom built 210mm cranks that mean I can finally use my long levers to full effect. It's meant a huge jump in performance. The bottom bracket is built higher off the ground to accommodate the long cranks.

That is fantastic. I was teaching sea kayaking for awhile and I wasn't able to get folks your size into a kayak until I made one.
As long as you've got a custom road bike I wonder if you considered a 26" wheeled sport/tour road bike? It would be one way to compensate for the higher bb as the slightly smaller wheels feel a smidge more sure footed with a lower wheel center and the 1.5" tire has LOTS of stick on the ashphalt. I got one made up years ago and although it's not an improvement for speed/hill climbing the 1.5" tires are good for worry free smashing through holes and no loss at average 14-18mph riding speeds.

shmily_dana
01-05-10, 03:58 PM
Nice bike. I'm kicking myself a little for not getting a custom frame that allows longer cranks.

Antelope 70cm
01-05-10, 07:32 PM
Beautiful ride!!!

Mazama
01-06-10, 06:52 PM
Super! I looked into Zinn when I was searching for a custom, but they were a bit pricey. I went with a Co-Motion (http://www.co-motion.com/) and I have no regrets. Happy riding fellow tall dude!
131508

thirdgenbird
01-06-10, 07:02 PM
who made the cranks?

looks pretty sweet. ive looked at getting that fork myself. any initial comments?

Sassonian
01-07-10, 01:57 PM
Thanks Mazama. Nice looking bike!

thirdgenbird: The cranks are custom built for Zinn. Proportional length cranks are a key part of his design philosophy. As to the fork it's an Alpha Q Z-pro fork that they use on all their Project Big bikes. I don't really have anything to compare it with other than my old steel forks which flexed like crazy. All I know is that I was reluctant to stand and sprint on my old bikes because of fork flex - and I'm not now - although I'm having to teach myself this as sitting to sprint had become a habit. I don't know what it's like compared to other carbon forks as I've never used any.

Here's the blub though - which may help...

The special Alpha Q full-carbon Z-pro fork features a 450mm steering tube – way beyond the industry standard 300mm (or, if you are lucky, 350mm)!
The super-long carbon steerer is also super-stiff. It is 1-1/8” in diameter, and its 4mm wall thickness is far greater than that of most full-carbon forks, including other True-Temper AlphaQ models. This, combined with the patented AlphaQ Carbon Rooting™ technology reinforcing the steering tube and crown, not only makes for a stronger fork, but the difference in stiffness is what is particularly noticeable for a tall rider. When you have a long steering tube inside of a tall bike, there is actually quite a bit of flex that you cannot see – flex of the steering tube inside of the frame’s head tube. This fork’s super-stout steering tube minimizes that.

I've posted some more photos of my bike here...
http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread.php?183238-Post-Your-Titaniums/page51
(you might need to scroll down to see them.)

FlaMike
01-07-10, 02:26 PM
That's one nice looking bike. :thumb: