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Porteur frame recommendation
I want to build a commuter porteur bike and would appreciate some help selecting a frame. I don't know much about frames etc but have read that a low trail Randonneur frame would be ideal, thus me posting here instead of the commuting forum.
Here are my requirements: * horizontal drops for an internal hub (sram automatix). How effective are the adjustment screws on the drops that frames such as the polyvalent have ? Worth it or are they a gimmick? * able to accommodate coaster brake - needs a strong rear triangle ? * geometry conducive to heavy front load - is low trail the only requirement here? * Possibly front disk brake it rains a lot where I am but I know this adds weight and complexity. Might be able to get away with rear coaster brake and front cantilever * Cantilever/disk brakes to allow for fenders * Fender room and attachment points * Wheels...not sure if 650B gives me better options for commuting tires * Doesn't need to be especially light * As cheap as possible given the above requirements - I want as little money as possible chained up on the street It seems like a VO polyvalent is an ideal candidate except for the cost... What exactly am I looking for here ? Could I buy a cheap hybrid or mountain bike frame 2nd hand and then get a raked fork separately to get low trail while keeping costs down ? Any help appreciated. Nick |
I moved this here from randonneuring, since nobody was going to answer there.
Modifying an existing bike to get low trail isn't going to be easy, you're probably talking a custom fork. The industry really isn't making many low trail bikes. And 650b is still a niche size for road tires. With your set of requirements, I'm afraid you probably are talking an expensive bike, you probably have to compromise. |
You mention both low trail forks and disk brakes. That's a rare combination. I only know of one non-custom fork on a production bike that offers it, the Elephant Bikes National Forest Explorer. There are porteur racks for it too. It doesn't come with horizontal drop-outs at the rear though and might be outside your price range.
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I think a All City Nature boy disc probably gets close, not low trail though. From what I've heard, low trail is one of those optimizations that you can probably live without. I want to put a porteur rack on my commuter, which is high trail. That isn't stopping me, the problem is that I would have trouble parking it
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I answered here... Merge?
http://www.bikeforums.net/utility-cy...me-advice.html Anyway, I thought the Republic Socrates covered many of the needs of the OP. Most IGH hubs with coaster brakes are 3 speed, although Shimano does make an 8 speed version. |
Trail is the ground plane distance between the Head tube axis line and a plumb line from the front wheel axis .
by increasing the fork rake/offset you can reduce the trail .. Get the Actual Trail Data and compare that, rather than brand names . FWIW My 2 Folding bikes , A Bike Friday Pocket Llama and a Brompton are low trail Geometry .. the handling Seemingly Improves with weight over the front wheel. |
1 Attachment(s)
Originally Posted by unterhausen
(Post 17764241)
I moved this here from randonneuring, since nobody was going to answer there.
Modifying an existing bike to get low trail isn't going to be easy, you're probably talking a custom fork. The industry really isn't making many low trail bikes. And 650b is still a niche size for road tires. With your set of requirements, I'm afraid you probably are talking an expensive bike, you probably have to compromise. http://bikeforums.net/attachment.php...hmentid=449030 |
Originally Posted by joewein
(Post 17764595)
You mention both low trail forks and disk brakes. That's a rare combination. I only know of one non-custom fork on a production bike that offers it, the Elephant Bikes National Forest Explorer. There are porteur racks for it too. It doesn't come with horizontal drop-outs at the rear though and might be outside your price range.
Those Elephant bikes look sweet ! |
Originally Posted by CliffordK
(Post 17764746)
I answered here... Merge?
http://www.bikeforums.net/utility-cy...me-advice.html Anyway, I thought the Republic Socrates covered many of the needs of the OP. Most IGH hubs with coaster brakes are 3 speed, although Shimano does make an 8 speed version. |
This one might work but not sure if fenders will fit
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