RIP Jim Blackburn
#1
Thread Starter
Senior Member

Joined: May 2021
Posts: 908
Likes: 871
#2
Steel is real



Joined: Mar 2013
Posts: 4,554
Likes: 2,633
From: Not far from Paris
Bikes: 93GiantTourer,92MeridaAlbon,96Scapin,98KonaKilaueua,93Peugeot Prestige,05CasatiClipper,98Jamis Dragon,95Tange Prestige(to be built),98VettaTeam,95Coppi,93Grandis,Daccordi x3(in build),98Piton(in build),99Trek SLR2300
Condoleances to his family and friends
may he RIP.
may he RIP.
#3
Edumacator




Joined: Jan 2018
Posts: 9,691
Likes: 5,175
From: Goose Creek, SC
Bikes: More than the people who ride them...oy.
33 years of retirement. Pretty awesome…
Loved my Blackburn rack and water bottle holders. Just a great re-engineering of stuff.
Loved my Blackburn rack and water bottle holders. Just a great re-engineering of stuff.
__________________
1987 Crest C'dale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin EL, 1990 Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Isoard, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 C'dale M500, 1984 Mercian Pro, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi ?, 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super, 1971 Raleigh Internat'l, 1998 Corratec U+D, 1991 Peugeot Slimestone, 1987 Bianchi Volpe, 1995 Trek 750
1987 Crest C'dale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin EL, 1990 Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Isoard, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 C'dale M500, 1984 Mercian Pro, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi ?, 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super, 1971 Raleigh Internat'l, 1998 Corratec U+D, 1991 Peugeot Slimestone, 1987 Bianchi Volpe, 1995 Trek 750
#5
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2016
Posts: 2,976
Likes: 1,846
From: Long Island, NY
Bikes: Trek 800 x 2, Schwinn Heavy Duti, Schwinn Traveler, Schwinn Le Tour Luxe, Schwinn Continental, Cannondale M400 and Lambert, Schwinn Super Sport
Rest in piece Mr. Blackburn. Your racks were prized and imitated.
Jim Backburn was another bike industry person that changed things. Prior to Blackburn racks, there were Eclipse or Pletcher. The Blackburn racks were sturdy enough for touring, the rack was triangulated side to side. It was a clever design and all welded construction made it stiff. The they followed that up with low rider racks and bottle cages. Good stuff.
At some point, Jim Blackburn sold the company and their products. "Blackburn" named products are sold in places like Walmart. I've got a Blackburn pump and tool kit. Both are excellent values. So, Bell sports is doing a decent job of keeping the name and quality going.
Jim Backburn was another bike industry person that changed things. Prior to Blackburn racks, there were Eclipse or Pletcher. The Blackburn racks were sturdy enough for touring, the rack was triangulated side to side. It was a clever design and all welded construction made it stiff. The they followed that up with low rider racks and bottle cages. Good stuff.
At some point, Jim Blackburn sold the company and their products. "Blackburn" named products are sold in places like Walmart. I've got a Blackburn pump and tool kit. Both are excellent values. So, Bell sports is doing a decent job of keeping the name and quality going.
Last edited by Velo Mule; 01-14-26 at 12:38 PM.
#6
Senior Member


Joined: Dec 2015
Posts: 1,956
Likes: 1,242
From: Menomonee Falls, WI
Bikes: 1984 Schwinn Supersport, 1988 Trek 400T, 1977 Trek TX900, 1982 Bianchi Champione del Mondo, 1978 Raleigh Supercourse, 1986 Trek 400 Elance, 1991 Waterford PDG OS Paramount, 1971 Schwinn Sports Tourer, 1985 Trek 670
Condolences to his family, I’ve got a lot of his stuff, all made before he sold out to Bell. Trainer, workstands, pump, etc, never an issue, will all easily last me.
Tim
Tim
#7
Senior Member




Joined: Oct 2015
Posts: 16,174
Likes: 9,549
From: PDX
Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
RIP Sir, your contribution cannot be overstated.
#8
Hey I'm a Blackburn fan too, but we mustn't forget there were always better racks available if you could afford it. Jack Taylor, Singer, Herse and all the other French constructeurs, plus the Japanese who emulated them, made tubular steel racks that were stiffer and stronger. Solid metal rods can't compete with tubes for strength-to-weight ratio, that's elementary math. Once Jim Merz started making his (when was that BTW?), everything else was immediately second best, though I think you had to buy a Merz frame to get one.
Blackburn's history says '75, but I never saw one until after my trans-con '76 ride. Did anyone actually get one in time for Bikecentennial? Might have been vaporware for a time before the retail pipeline had them. One of my tanscon companions alnd I worked in a big well-connected bike shop, so I think if the Blackburn had been available, we'd have known about it. Maybe not.
I have a Bike World magazine article from '76 where the writer said he'd wanted a Merz rack for "several years", so that probably puts Merz earlier than Blackburn. That article implies you could buy just the racks, for an existing frame — maybe Jim can chime in on whether he actually ever did that.
I made my first tubular CrMo racks in '78, not influenced by Merz because I hadn't seen one yet, I was copying Taylor/Herse/Singer. But I gladly used Blackburn racks on several of my bikes over the years because building a custom one-off CrMo rack is a daunting amount of work, and I'm lazy. I think even the raw tubing to make a rack cost more than a ready-to-ride Blackburn.
Pre-Blackburn, for those of more modest means, there were the Karrimor and Tonard brazed-steel racks "mass" produced by small shops in England, available in the US though distribution was poor, you couldn't just walk into any LBS. The Tonard was sold in the US by Hartley Alley's Touring Cyclist shop in Colorado, rebranded as the TC rack. I still have a couple of those, rode across the continent in '76 with one. I had to mail order it of course.
Then Bruce Gordon came along with his (when? I forget.), which unlike the Merz were adjustable to fit more than just the one frame they were made for. Expensive, but probably something like 3 to 5x as strong as a Blackburn and way stiffer.
Anyone remember the joke ad Gordon put out, that called Blackburn racks "Rockburn" and said they were stone-age? Might have been produced by his then-girlfriend Sky Yeagher (sp?), who made the brilliant 'Welcome to the Future' robot factory spoof (page 1). ('Welcome to the Future' page 2)
Ah, here it is:

I hope this is not seen as disrespectful towards Mr. Blackburn, whom I respect deeply. He will be missed.
Blackburn's history says '75, but I never saw one until after my trans-con '76 ride. Did anyone actually get one in time for Bikecentennial? Might have been vaporware for a time before the retail pipeline had them. One of my tanscon companions alnd I worked in a big well-connected bike shop, so I think if the Blackburn had been available, we'd have known about it. Maybe not.
I have a Bike World magazine article from '76 where the writer said he'd wanted a Merz rack for "several years", so that probably puts Merz earlier than Blackburn. That article implies you could buy just the racks, for an existing frame — maybe Jim can chime in on whether he actually ever did that.
I made my first tubular CrMo racks in '78, not influenced by Merz because I hadn't seen one yet, I was copying Taylor/Herse/Singer. But I gladly used Blackburn racks on several of my bikes over the years because building a custom one-off CrMo rack is a daunting amount of work, and I'm lazy. I think even the raw tubing to make a rack cost more than a ready-to-ride Blackburn.
Pre-Blackburn, for those of more modest means, there were the Karrimor and Tonard brazed-steel racks "mass" produced by small shops in England, available in the US though distribution was poor, you couldn't just walk into any LBS. The Tonard was sold in the US by Hartley Alley's Touring Cyclist shop in Colorado, rebranded as the TC rack. I still have a couple of those, rode across the continent in '76 with one. I had to mail order it of course.
Then Bruce Gordon came along with his (when? I forget.), which unlike the Merz were adjustable to fit more than just the one frame they were made for. Expensive, but probably something like 3 to 5x as strong as a Blackburn and way stiffer.
Anyone remember the joke ad Gordon put out, that called Blackburn racks "Rockburn" and said they were stone-age? Might have been produced by his then-girlfriend Sky Yeagher (sp?), who made the brilliant 'Welcome to the Future' robot factory spoof (page 1). ('Welcome to the Future' page 2)
Ah, here it is:

I hope this is not seen as disrespectful towards Mr. Blackburn, whom I respect deeply. He will be missed.
#9
Senior Member




Joined: Oct 2015
Posts: 16,174
Likes: 9,549
From: PDX
Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
JM027 that he built for himself was built in August 1974 I believe so he started them before anybody else it would seem.


RR150 was built for a cross country tour using Blackburn's in April 1978, I think the customer said he couldn't or didn't want spend the extra $$$$$$ for custom as they had become very spendy by then.



RR150 was built for a cross country tour using Blackburn's in April 1978, I think the customer said he couldn't or didn't want spend the extra $$$$$$ for custom as they had become very spendy by then.

#10
Junior Member


Joined: Aug 2020
Posts: 105
Likes: 84
From: Saint Paul, MN & Clear Lake, IA
Bikes: CBT Italia, 73 Peugeot, Gary Fisher Joshua, John Deere custom hybrid, K2 EasyRider, Yakota tandem, Pinarello Montello, Colnago Mexico, Gitane Tandem
RIP Jim. I still have two Blackburn racks and countless bottle cages. One of the racks is on my commuter bike that I hang a modern backpack that converts into a pannier. Timeless design and I will always pick them up whenever they cross my path.
#11
Senior Member


Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 14,180
Likes: 5,312
From: Portland, OR
Bikes: (2) ti TiCycles, 2007 w/ triple and 2011 fixed, 1979 Peter Mooney, ~1983 Trek 420 now fixed and ~1973 Raleigh Carlton Competition gravel grinder
For me, the LowRider rack was a game changer. A rack you could put on a fix gear and still be able to go up hard hills loaded, out of the saddle; tugging the bars, twisting the frame and rocking the bike with every muscle you had. And the only change in bike handling was that it was (however much you were carrying) harder.
Yes, those racks weren't perfect, Every singe one I owned eventually broke at the dropout. Not dangerous; I usually learned about it when I went to remove the rack. The Jadd (sp) and another post-Blackburn rack have each outlasted several Blackburns and are going strong. But without Blackburn, they probably wouldn't exist.
Yes, those racks weren't perfect, Every singe one I owned eventually broke at the dropout. Not dangerous; I usually learned about it when I went to remove the rack. The Jadd (sp) and another post-Blackburn rack have each outlasted several Blackburns and are going strong. But without Blackburn, they probably wouldn't exist.
#13
Were the 'flat deck' Blackburn racks made when Mr. Blackburn still owned the company? I've had a couple of them over the years, and, although I'm not a long-distance tourist, for a utility, day- or credit-card-touring bike, they'd always be on my list. And I sure wouldn't kick one off of a bike that already had one one it.
Solid, well built stuff. The only ones I've seen broken were crashed or otherwise brutalized. (And not many of those.) And, if the one on the Fuji is typical of the breed, they take powder coat pretty well, too. Which does not suck.
Tailwinds, Mr. Blackburn. There's a lot of bikes out there that have been made better by something you made.
--Shannon
Solid, well built stuff. The only ones I've seen broken were crashed or otherwise brutalized. (And not many of those.) And, if the one on the Fuji is typical of the breed, they take powder coat pretty well, too. Which does not suck.
Tailwinds, Mr. Blackburn. There's a lot of bikes out there that have been made better by something you made.
--Shannon
Last edited by ShannonM; 01-15-26 at 11:59 PM.
#14
Senior Member

Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 526
Likes: 191
From: Broomfield, Colorado
Bikes: 2017 Gunnar CrossHairs Rohloff, 2022 Detroit Bikes Cortello
For me, the LowRider rack was a game changer. A rack you could put on a fix gear and still be able to go up hard hills loaded, out of the saddle; tugging the bars, twisting the frame and rocking the bike with every muscle you had. And the only change in bike handling was that it was (however much you were carrying) harder.
Yes, those racks weren't perfect, Every singe one I owned eventually broke at the dropout. Not dangerous; I usually learned about it when I went to remove the rack. The Jadd (sp) and another post-Blackburn rack have each outlasted several Blackburns and are going strong. But without Blackburn, they probably wouldn't exist.
Yes, those racks weren't perfect, Every singe one I owned eventually broke at the dropout. Not dangerous; I usually learned about it when I went to remove the rack. The Jadd (sp) and another post-Blackburn rack have each outlasted several Blackburns and are going strong. But without Blackburn, they probably wouldn't exist.
#16
I used a Blackburn light weight low rider rack on our Albany-Burlington-Lake George tour last August, which included a very nasty section called Pratt Road. Worked great.
Also installed a Blackburn short front rack (a behind the fork model) on the Columbine this afternoon. Perfect.
Thanks, Mr. Blackburn, for your design work and products. RIP.
Also installed a Blackburn short front rack (a behind the fork model) on the Columbine this afternoon. Perfect.
Thanks, Mr. Blackburn, for your design work and products. RIP.
__________________
Hard at work in the Secret Underground Laboratory...
Hard at work in the Secret Underground Laboratory...
#17
Senior Member

Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 1,516
Likes: 139
From: Rural Western Wisconsin
Bikes: Down to 4 vintage touring machines
#18
Extraordinary Magnitude


Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 14,085
Likes: 2,140
From: Waukesha WI
Bikes: 1978 Trek TX700; 1978/79 Trek 736; 1984 Specialized Stumpjumper Sport; 1984 Schwinn Voyageur SP; 1985 Trek 620; 1985 Trek 720; 1986 Trek 400 Elance; 1987 Schwinn High Sierra; 1990 Miyata 1000LT
There is such a beautiful flow to his racks. Thank you Mr Blackburn.
I have what I assume is a really old Jim Blackburn rack that Flog00 gave me- unfortunately I don't have any pix of it and he took his down.
This is a pretty cool Blackburn rack thread: Rear rack similarities
I have what I assume is a really old Jim Blackburn rack that Flog00 gave me- unfortunately I don't have any pix of it and he took his down.
This is a pretty cool Blackburn rack thread: Rear rack similarities
__________________
*Recipient of the 2006 Time Magazine "Person Of The Year" Award*
Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
#20
Full Member

Joined: May 2023
Posts: 367
Likes: 2,283
From: Big Sur California
Bikes: 1946 Holdsworth Cyclone, 1969 Cinelli SC, 1972 Raleigh Pro, 1973 Merz road bike, 1974 Alex Singer Sportif, 1974 Merz track bike, 1975 Teledyne Titan, 1976 Ritchey road bike, 1977 DiNucci built Merz track bike, 1977 (?) Exxon Graftek, many more!
Sad to see that Jim Blackburn passed away. It seems like he got to have fun after he retired!
I met Jim around 1977, he shared an industrial rental unit with Mike Sinyard, Specialized Bicycle founder, in Campbell California. At that time Blackburn was selling the front and rear racks that places the load above the wheels, and bottle cages. He sold a lot of bottle cages back then. Both companies were small, one or two employees each I think. Mike was a good friend from when he started Specialized in 1974, I visited him from time to time. I rode into the joint warehouse after riding from Portland on my new Merz touring bike with the first low rider rack I designed and made. I rode into the shop, Blackburn came over to look at my bike. He looked closely but didn't say anything. Several months later he comes out with his first low rider Blackburn aluminum rack! The load position was the same, but the function was vastly inferior. He was, however, a much better businessman than me and sold a ton of them.
Here are some shots showing my rack designs and where this all started. The first shot is a ride I did in 1964, riding from Portland to Denver, using a Plecher rear rack. It worked but left a lot to be desired, flexy and not very strong, made for carrying a lunch pair to work. The size of the top was a good starting point though. Several years later I rode from Portland to Panama, using a Rayleigh Pro! I designed and made front and rear racks that used 4130 CrMo tubing, clamped onto the mounting points. These racks were very stiff and strong, although weighed only a bit more than the Plecher rack. The magazine article explains the benefits. The last 2 photos show Paul and Michael Sylvester at the start of a one year ride starting in Portland, across the USA at a very fast pace, continuing in Europe covering thousands of miles. Paul's bike included my low rider design. This ride was cycle camping, requiring careful thought to reduce weight. Almost all the load is placed in this front setup, very nice handling and stable. The rack is clamped onto the front fork as shown, this fastening method was used for all of my rack designs. It equals the strength and stiffness of brazing the rack in place, but with the convenance of removal if needed. The only drawback is they have to be custom made for each bike. There is no way to make any adjustable rack that mounts as well with the same light weight. I did make these racks for bikes other than my Merz frames. I don't think there are any racks that work better. I never knew about French and Japanese low rider racks that were around before I came to the same conclusion, put the main load centered on the front axle. My racks were stronger and stiffer than these earlier designs, but were impossible to produce commercially viably. After I closed my shop in Portland to work with Mike Sinyard in 1982, Bruce Gordon started making touring racks to fill the void. His racks were adjustable, a requirement for the market. His were much better, but much more money, than Blackburn racks. Jim Merz






I met Jim around 1977, he shared an industrial rental unit with Mike Sinyard, Specialized Bicycle founder, in Campbell California. At that time Blackburn was selling the front and rear racks that places the load above the wheels, and bottle cages. He sold a lot of bottle cages back then. Both companies were small, one or two employees each I think. Mike was a good friend from when he started Specialized in 1974, I visited him from time to time. I rode into the joint warehouse after riding from Portland on my new Merz touring bike with the first low rider rack I designed and made. I rode into the shop, Blackburn came over to look at my bike. He looked closely but didn't say anything. Several months later he comes out with his first low rider Blackburn aluminum rack! The load position was the same, but the function was vastly inferior. He was, however, a much better businessman than me and sold a ton of them.
Here are some shots showing my rack designs and where this all started. The first shot is a ride I did in 1964, riding from Portland to Denver, using a Plecher rear rack. It worked but left a lot to be desired, flexy and not very strong, made for carrying a lunch pair to work. The size of the top was a good starting point though. Several years later I rode from Portland to Panama, using a Rayleigh Pro! I designed and made front and rear racks that used 4130 CrMo tubing, clamped onto the mounting points. These racks were very stiff and strong, although weighed only a bit more than the Plecher rack. The magazine article explains the benefits. The last 2 photos show Paul and Michael Sylvester at the start of a one year ride starting in Portland, across the USA at a very fast pace, continuing in Europe covering thousands of miles. Paul's bike included my low rider design. This ride was cycle camping, requiring careful thought to reduce weight. Almost all the load is placed in this front setup, very nice handling and stable. The rack is clamped onto the front fork as shown, this fastening method was used for all of my rack designs. It equals the strength and stiffness of brazing the rack in place, but with the convenance of removal if needed. The only drawback is they have to be custom made for each bike. There is no way to make any adjustable rack that mounts as well with the same light weight. I did make these racks for bikes other than my Merz frames. I don't think there are any racks that work better. I never knew about French and Japanese low rider racks that were around before I came to the same conclusion, put the main load centered on the front axle. My racks were stronger and stiffer than these earlier designs, but were impossible to produce commercially viably. After I closed my shop in Portland to work with Mike Sinyard in 1982, Bruce Gordon started making touring racks to fill the void. His racks were adjustable, a requirement for the market. His were much better, but much more money, than Blackburn racks. Jim Merz






#22
Full Member

Joined: May 2023
Posts: 367
Likes: 2,283
From: Big Sur California
Bikes: 1946 Holdsworth Cyclone, 1969 Cinelli SC, 1972 Raleigh Pro, 1973 Merz road bike, 1974 Alex Singer Sportif, 1974 Merz track bike, 1975 Teledyne Titan, 1976 Ritchey road bike, 1977 DiNucci built Merz track bike, 1977 (?) Exxon Graftek, many more!
#23
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2016
Posts: 2,976
Likes: 1,846
From: Long Island, NY
Bikes: Trek 800 x 2, Schwinn Heavy Duti, Schwinn Traveler, Schwinn Le Tour Luxe, Schwinn Continental, Cannondale M400 and Lambert, Schwinn Super Sport
Hey, Jim. If anyone would be an expert on this it is you. As a machinist, cyclist frame builder, tourist and hanging out with Mike Sinard and the company that was innovating tires at the time. If they could fold (or loop) back then, you would have done it. So, what was different? Or was this just a bad practice that some tourist, bike catalog companies and idiots like me did? Keep in mind that I didn't keep it pretzeled up for a month.
Sorry for the tangent. The racks look great Jim. And they look to be handling a lot of weight.
#24
Happy banana slug

Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 4,566
Likes: 2,515
From: Arcata, California, U.S., North America, Earth, Saggitarius Arm, Milky Way
Bikes: 1984 Araya MB 26L, 1992 Specialized Rockhopper Sport, 1993 Hard Rock Ultra, 1994 Trek Multitrack 750, 1995 Trek Singletrack 930
That's a darned good question; I just dug out the aluminum rack I picked up from the bike co-op for $1; someone had painted it very thickly with purple paint. It's open in the center and is stamped "jim blackburn". Maybe I'll get it sandblasted.
#25
aka Tom Reingold




Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 44,299
Likes: 6,556
From: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA
Bikes: 1962 Rudge Sports, 1971 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Raleigh Pro Track, 1974 Raleigh International, 1975 Viscount Fixie, 1982 McLean, 1996 Lemond (Ti), 2002 Burley Zydeco tandem
Oh too bad about his death!
If his racks were not the first good, stiff racks, maybe they were the first mass-marketed ones. I was selling Pletscher racks by the dozen a week, and then came the Blackburns. We were impressed! They were not terribly expensive, and maybe that was the secret. I still use the one I bought in 1979 or so, on one of my bikes! It was on the bike I took on my 3-month tour in Europe.
If his racks were not the first good, stiff racks, maybe they were the first mass-marketed ones. I was selling Pletscher racks by the dozen a week, and then came the Blackburns. We were impressed! They were not terribly expensive, and maybe that was the secret. I still use the one I bought in 1979 or so, on one of my bikes! It was on the bike I took on my 3-month tour in Europe.
__________________
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.






