Custom geometry - M...
 

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[Closed] Custom geometry - Marino?

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Just mulling over this idea at the moment - it’s my 40th at the end of this year and the wife keeps asking me what I’d like. Originally came up with carbon road wheels - but that doesn’t feel as special as perhaps a custom designed frame.

My hardtail is currently a 650b Vitus Sentier - the build kit is all solid stuff - 140mm Pike / Gx 11 speed / Code front guide re rear brakes / e1900 DT Swiss wheels / 150mm dropper etc.

It’s great for mucking about on - the only way it could really improve is being a bit more forgiving on my lower back and perhaps a touch longer on steeper tech stuff.

So it got me thinking about starting with the base geometry for the Vitus and tweaking it a bit - then get it made in some nice steel (Sentier 2018 vrx)

It seems 725 is the nicest steel on their website - is this likely to have some good flex in it?

Current geometry is:

Seat tube - 432mm
Chainstay - 425mm
HT - 66 degree
Effective top tube - 620mm
Effective seat tube angle - 73 degrees
Head tube - 110mm
Stack - 617mm
BB drop - 45mm

The above based on a2c of 532mm.

I currently run a 60mm stem and I wouldn’t want to go shorter on the current frame as it would get a bit cramped. Would like to run a 45mm sort of size on any new frame.

I think I’d like to increase the reach but shorten the stem - keeping the chainstays the same 425mm. Maybe the headtube could go a little longer as I run quite a few spacers under the stem at present.

The frame is designed around plus is tyres (up to 2.8) but I’m happy running 2.5WT up front and a 2.3 at the back.

Any thoughts as I’ve never done this before?


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 6:30 pm
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It seems 725 is the nicest steel on their website – is this likely to have some good flex in it?

You can't just look at it like that, the tubeset butting, welds, bracing, bending etc will all impact upon flex.

What about a UK builder you could visit?


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 6:36 pm
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I looked into this a while back, get yourself set up on BikeCad and have a play.

The best bit of geometry advice I came across online was:

"if you adjust one measurement to improve a particular characteristic it'll have a detrimental knock on effect to another, at the end of the day it's all a compromise".

Anon.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 6:40 pm
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Cost is the main driver for Marino - thinking no more than £750 ish for the frame.

They have a few butting / bracing options - I guess the more minimalist ones will lead to a little more give?

I’m not sure without going Marino / Far East I’ll get something at that budget unless there are any other suggestions?


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 6:52 pm
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If you're not set on Steel there's also Mielec, based out of Poland who builds in Aluminium.

725 is the same as 4130, it's just the reynolds branded stuff, if the 725 is butted and the 4130 is not, which is what I would expect then I would take the upcharge and get the 725 but it's actually the same metal.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 7:19 pm
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I have a frame from Marino (one of the sick frames to be precise) so why I did not go down the custom route i’m quite have looking and reading frame geometry. As above, a chance to one element of geometry will have an effect on another part. How tall are you and what sort of riding do you like?


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 7:24 pm
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I’m 5’9 and use the bike for local rides in the main. Mostly a mixture of easy trail centres but then some fairly difficult steep off piste stuff. I like a poppy / manually hardtail (which the Vitus is) but a little longer reach should still be ok for that as well as a touch more stable on the steep bits.

I’d definitely like it to be a little more forgiving though - hence thinking steel rather than alloy. My budget probably doesn’t run to Ti unless I go budget Far East - I remember reading a thread about one a while back I think.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 8:17 pm
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I went the budget Far East route and have been delighted with the frame. It was a couple of years ago when the pound was a bit stronger but you may be able to get one within budget. Check out Waltly - they were very easy to deal with and helpful.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 8:24 pm
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I'm waiting for Marino to build this for me in 725.

if the 725 is butted and the 4130 is not

Is the correct assumption.

[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49950653468_7607c10732_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49950653468_7607c10732_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2j6Ya2f ]Drawings for new custom Marino frame[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/stu-b/ ]multispeedstu[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 8:57 pm
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That’s quite a big / long / slack hardtail. Is that a sagged or unsagged reach?

What program have you designed that on - or did you give Marino sizes and they provided it?


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 9:06 pm
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I love my Marino frame, if you give him numbers then he does it in bike cad and sends to you to check over.

I think I paid about £450 all in but that was standard 4130 tubing. Mine isn't especially forgiving but has a seat tube brace like above. If you had a standard silhouette frame I imagine it would be a bit more forgiving.

You can get the fancier tubing and go for internal cable routing if you want something a bit more unique.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 9:13 pm
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That’s quite a big / long / slack hardtail.

I'm 6' and like to ride steep trails.
I also own a Geometron so was aiming for something similarly slack to replace my current hardtail (Last Fastforwards).
Design is tweeked from the production frames Marino UK have in stock.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 9:16 pm
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SSStu's design is virtually identical to what I'd go for (Also 6ft). As it is I ride a production Pole Taival that is quite similar.

The Taival has loads of subtle tube manipulation all over it, as well as the butting, does Marino manipulate their tubing too?

I'd go for a taller stack, slightly longer reach and slightly less slack fork, but we're well into personsl preferences.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 9:36 pm
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You'll get more comfort / flex by using a 27.2mm seatpost than any frame tube manipulation. Similarly the 73 seat angle will help a little compared to current steep fashions.

I use a curved seat tube for tyre clearance as I run short chainstays (410 ish). A by-product of this is that the 67 deg top part of the tube again adds a bit more flex from seatpost bending (effective sta is 72deg).

[url= https://i.postimg.cc/Y2vyV7Rv/DSC-0629.jp g" target="_blank">https://i.postimg.cc/Y2vyV7Rv/DSC-0629.jp g"/> [/img][/url]


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 10:13 pm
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Lots of food for thought. I know I want to run at least a 150mm dropper - if I could fit in a 180mm Oneup dropper that would be even better. Having seen more much a dropper flexes backwards and forwards I wonder if a longer one = more comfortable?

I think I need to play with a bit of software that lets me put in certain things I think I want in a frame - and then shows what the rest of the angles / distances come out at. Is that what BikeCAD does or am I hoping for something that doesn’t exist?

I’m not set on steepening the seat angle necessarily if that could make the bike less comfortable - the 76 or 77 degree on the fs works well but you’ve got 130mm of cushioning on that.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 10:47 pm
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If I were you I’d put a Works -2 deg headset into the Vitus before you commit to such a steep head angle for that kind of hardtail. That’s particularly true if you’d like to run a shorter stem as it’s likely to feel nervy.

You’ve mentioned liking your new Aether 7. I’d consider if you want a hardtail with similar geometry to that (at sag).

Also, I’d ride some fancy steel hardtails to see if you can feel an improvement in ride quality vs your bike. I went from a 853 frame to an alloy one and if the latter was harsher it was cancelled out by going from 26” to 27.5 wheels.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 10:56 pm
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So are you saying if I keep the same headangle but slightly lengthen the reach / shorten the stem it’s going to be twitchy?

The next size up Sentier has a 449mm reach and the same seat and head angles + chainstays / bb drop. Just the seat tube goes up 50mm in length which would be less comfortable for me / limit a larger dropper.

So if I effectively used the geometry from that but shortened the seat tube surely I wouldn’t end up with something really twitchy? Pretty sure the Sentier doesn’t ship with a 60mm stem - it just happens that’s what I had and I thought it felt great.

I’m going to just be swapping frame for frame with all the same bits (except potentially the headset where the Waltby definitely has a 44mm headtube so would need to run an external one - not sure about the Marino).

The only thing is I don’t want to turn this into a full hardcore hardtail - I’d still like it to be more playful than the Aether as that’s the sort of rides I use the hardtail for.


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 11:05 pm
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Lengthening the reach won’t make it more twitchy but stem length really affects steering feel if you keep the bar width and head angle the same. It’s most extreme as you head from 60 to 35mm because bars have backsweep which tends to make a 35mm stem closer to zero mm long (hands in line with steerer tube).

Personally I don’t think a slack head angle makes a hardtail less playful. Going very long on the reach and/or chainstays does, but a slack head angle on a reasonably short bike with no rear suspension just keeps it safe when the back end is going crazy!

What’s the reach? Have you checked what the sagged geometry is?


 
Posted : 29/06/2020 11:17 pm
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My current reach according to the Vitus chart is 432mm - I’m assuming this is unsagged - a2c quoted as 524 on that chart but according to another chart I found my 140mm Pike is 517mm. So I guess that marginally increases the reach. I don’t think a 45mm stem is that short - I have one that size on my Aether and has running a 32mm one on my Aeris 145.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 7:06 am
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“I don’t think a 45mm stem is that short – I have one that size on my Aether and has running a 32mm one on my Aeris 145.“

Yes but those bikes have head angles of less than 65 deg which calms the steering feel, and they’ll get slacker still when riding. Your Vitus has a head angle of 67.2 deg with a Pike 140 and 25% sag which will get steeper when riding.

This is the geometry of your Vitus at 25% sag:

HA: 67.2
SA: 74.2
Reach: 445mm
Stack: 608mm
BB drop: 54mm
ETT: 616mm

Have you looked at the current Stanton Slackline? That seems to be the vibe you’re after.

I wouldn’t expect a custom frame builder to be able to get a certain “feel” unless they’ve built tons of bikes in that material and in the process sussed out the right tube gauges and butting that work, through years of trial and error.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 9:14 am
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On the subject of geometry, does anyone else switch between flat and clips on a modern steep seat-tube bike?

With flat pedals I found my Scandal great, but as soon as I clipped in it just feels awkward. It just feels like I can't corner as the saddles in the wrong place. On my last bike (rigid 29er with fairly classic XC geometry) and before that an On-One Fatty which was moderately long and slack by fat bike standards, I actually went back to not having a dropper so I don't know if I'm just used to having that little bit of space in front of the saddle to move around in. But even with the saddle dropped it still feels strangely awkward.

I did wonder if the steep seat angle is just forcing me to pedal more with the middle of my foot on the flat pedals (it does feel very inefficient being that perched forwards on flat roads) and effectively lengthening the chainstay and shortening the reach. And then SPD's are just making the whole bike unbalanced.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 9:32 am
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You can’t just look at it like that, the tubeset butting, welds, bracing, bending etc will all impact upon flex.

I don't think butting makes any difference. What I was told ages ago was the ONLY thing impacting the flex of a given (steel - don't think this applies across materials) tube is the outer diameter. so a bit of scaffold with the same diameter as the nicest reynolds will flex just the same. The only thing posher tubes get you is things like more butting, which strips out weight where its not needed


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 9:39 am
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On the subject of geometry, does anyone else switch between flat and clips on a modern steep seat-tube bike?

Yep I switch back and forwards on my Fastworwards.
Makes no difference to me.

It just feels like I can’t corner as the saddles in the wrong place

I only ever have the seat at full mast on road/fireroad sections.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 9:57 am
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Funnily enough I was looking at the slack line last night - but it comes in at £1000 ish in the top spec tubing and basic paint colour. There was something else about it that didn’t quite add up for me when I looked, but I can’t remember what it was off the top of my head.

Tbh the next size up Sentier with a shorter seat tube and in steel or Ti would probably be perfect for what I want.

Perhaps broadly what I’ve outlined above but slackening the head angle by a degree to 65 might be an option.

I’ve only got a rudimentary idea about geometry and could do with a tool to play about with to see what one change makes to another part of the frame in size / angle.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 10:40 am
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On the pedal front I don’t find it makes too much difference if I’m on flats or clipped in to cornering. I guess I’m slippery conditions I’m more comfortable on flats as I know I can get a foot down just that bit quicker. One bike is 74 degrees seat angle - the other is either 76 or 77 I think so I guess that classes as quite steep these days.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 10:48 am
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Interesting thread this. I’ve just acquired a last fast forward frame for very little to replace a pinnacle ramin I got for even less. Even with a 2 degree slackset the Ramin steeper than I would like at 67
I’ve used This site To compare geometries and see how different forks will affect the numbers. Thinking of running the FF with a 120mm fork (at least initially as that’s all I have) which will give a good bit longer reach than the quoted figures for my frame (which I think are unsagged) at the expense of slightly steeper head and seat angles and lower bb.
Having been looking at the usual suspects for steel 29ers (OO, cotic, Stanton, etc) the idea of getting one custom for around the same money from Marino certainly appeals. What’s the buying experience like?


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 11:33 am
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On the pedal front I don’t find it makes too much difference if I’m on flats or clipped in to cornering. I guess I’m slippery conditions I’m more comfortable on flats as I know I can get a foot down just that bit quicker.

Maybe it was just a bad day then, Swinley isn't renowned for confidence-inspiring grip in the wet, lots of cobbles and roots polished by hundreds of thousands of tyres! it would go round the sort of neutral corners that are never a problem just fine, but as soon as "laser cock" was deployed it was more like "Poundland halogen penis", rather than tightening up and exiting the corner quickly the whole bike just wobbled and skittered sideways.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 11:49 am
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I had a Last Fastforward prior to the Taival.

It was may gateway bike into new skool LLS, but as I learned about this 'new' geometry I found it's reach too short for it's slack headtube angle.

Seat tube was less than 74° too and with the front axle so far forwards my weight distribution was too far rearward to be intuitive.

Sure I could move forwards and load the front, but I wasn't in the right position naturally, which often resulted in a tiny delay to steering inputs, which got tiresome and a bit crashy when I was tired.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 11:57 am
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Yeah I’m quite keen not to end up with a bike with a reach that’s too long for it’s use / what I like and the same on the slack head angle. I’m really happy with my fs bike right now - I just want my hardtail to be a touch more playful again from the fs.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 12:09 pm
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@scienceofficer that’s what I’m thinking regarding running shorter forks- would bring the numbers into the same ball park as frames like the on ones. (Unsagged...)


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 12:40 pm
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I reckon your logic is sound. Watch that BB though. Its low anyway, possibly annoyingly low if you are running 650b with those 120 forks.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 12:45 pm
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Yeah I think I might need to invest in some 165mm cranks!
Running 29 though


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 1:16 pm
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https://geometrygeeks.bike/bike/sick-wulf-2018/

So I have a large wulf OG 64 degrees head angle set up with 29x2.6 tyres and am 5.9” is size. I would say after a years worth of use I would happy go slacker for a hardtail to 63 or even 62. The reach is spot on with a 40mm stem (have a geomatron with a 500 reach and have to run a 32mm stem). I would say it would be worth talking with Stanton as they do do the custom route as well


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 2:16 pm
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Stanton unfortunately are £999 for an 853 Slackline with the cheapest paint - so they’re over budget already. Al Ty Pugh they are very very nice.

I have a full suss that’s 457mm reach / 65 degree headangle and 140mmf / 130mm r travel. This hardtail is to be more mellow than that.

I’ve been down the 64 degree HA / 481mm reach with 170mm / 160mm travel and after 3 years I decided it’s just too long for my little short Dino arms (even with a 32mm stem) and too much bike for 80% of my riding.

Hence I sized down in both reach and travel on my current bike and I’m really really happy with how that rides and fits. I haven’t done an uplift day on it yet but I expect it to be pretty decent still for that, it rides better on steep / slow ish tech (for me anyway) and for general riding it’s more fun.

The hardtail is really for messing about on locally, or if I’m out joining up bridleways with road sections. Also some steeper tech stuff fairly local.


 
Posted : 30/06/2020 2:39 pm
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Just been sent this.
Looks like it'll be here quicker than I thought.
Just the small matter of actually welding the tubes together now.😄
[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50070453698_7b5b9da11e_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50070453698_7b5b9da11e_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2jhyass ]Merino Build[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/stu-b/ ]multispeedstu[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 8:33 am
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@singlespeedstu Out of curiosity what was the waiting time between confirming your geo and paying a deposit and then seeing the frame getting built?

I'm wondering how long the build queue is at the moment


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 10:25 am
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That looks good - I wouldn’t mind something that has that line from the top tube down into the seat stays - just without that seat tube brace. Mine wouldn’t be so slack / wouldn’t be getting ridden so hard so if there could be a more subtle brace there that would work.

I’ve dropped Waltly an email too to get a ball park cost for one of their frames but I’m expecting it to be too expensive.

Someone suggested Curtis - their 853 frame for £1150 with custom geometry at no extra cost looks good but a fair chunk over budget unfortunately.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 10:25 am
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Looks like a powered up TIG plant in the background of Stu's photo so probably finished by now (or at least tacked together and on the welding bench).

Paint over there or in UK?


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 11:19 am
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I've bought a couple of frames of Waltly Titanium - prices start from about $600, my totally custom fat bike with curved tubes, polished logos was $1000 - it's the one with orange wheels on their gallery. Quite a few of the 'UK' titanium frame builders buy from them.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 11:32 am
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what was the waiting time between confirming your geo and paying a deposit and then seeing the frame getting built?

Paid a deposit at the end of May.
There's a delivery to the UK of production frames due in three weeks time.
It should be on that delivery.
Not bad considering he's been working on his own and moved his unit because of the current situation.

I wouldn’t mind something that has that line from the top tube down into the seat stays

That's something that I asked specifically for.

Paint over there or in UK?

No paint, going for a raw finish with clearcoat.
That's being done over there.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 11:53 am
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What's the quality of manufacture like dove biker?

I'm considering getting them to make me something like SSStu's frame, but in Ti.

I'm a bit worried they won't have the requisite experience to spec appropriate tubes for something that can be ridden in such an aggro fashion.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 11:55 am
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My dad has a Planet X Hurricane, it came in a Walty box. It's very well made, couldn't fault it at all.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 1:39 pm
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Waltly haven’t come
Back yet but I’m excited a bit that the comment on the last page suggested they started at $600 and with bendy tubes went up to $1000 ish. I assume there’s duty to pay on top of that when it comes in but I’m not really after too many bent tubes. The 3 main tubes would be straight with chainstays bent enough to leave room for up to a 2.4wt Maxxis tyre in the mud ideally. Not sure about seatstays shapes right now - need to do some more research on that.

As said previously I like on that Marino that it looks like the top tube flows straight into the seatstays. Hopefully a short seat tube with a long dropper means there will be some give in the saddle position for comfort purposes - my 180mm dropper on the day definitely flexes backwards and forwards quite a bit.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 1:59 pm
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Just looked back at my Waltly frame - it was $1000 shipped. Didn’t have to pay any duty, customs muster have missed it. They did also put a value of $50 on the box which was decent of them!


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 3:15 pm
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Thanks - how long ago was it you bought that for $1000?


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 3:24 pm
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2 years ago. It has sliding dropouts and a curved down tube which pushed up the cost a bit.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 3:31 pm
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Ok - I’ll see what they come back with as a ballpark figure.

Do they offer any advice on geometry / the frame details you’ve requested or so they blindly just make exactly what you ask for.

I assume if I contacted Curtis to get one of their frames they’d probably opine on what you’d requested and tell you if you were doing something stupid etc.

Assume Marino probably just again make exactly what you’ve asked for with no advice / warnings about stupidity in your design.....


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 4:23 pm
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They didn't really offer advice as such, but I had a fairly clear idea of what I wanted - basically a ti Kona Honzo with a slightly slacker HA and longer reach.

Sent them a geometry chart for the honzo, told them the tweaks I wanted, then they sent back an updated geometry chart and went through options like headtube, dropouts, dropper ports etc. Once agreed I got a final geometry \ spec chart and paid a deposit. About 6 weeks later it was built, pictures sent and I paid the balance and got the frame a couple of weeks later.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 4:34 pm
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Sounds perfect actually - I want to take the next size up Vitus Sentier and drop the height of the seat tube mostly - and maybe per advice in this thread slacken the headangle to 65 degrees.


 
Posted : 03/07/2020 4:40 pm
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Update

Put a query into Waltly for a ballpark cost and so far just got silence back.

Looked again at the Curtis and would like the raw finish if I go that route - it’s actually £1300 for that frame option where they polish it and clear powder coat it. Decided that’s too rich for me.

So I’ve today put in a provisional order for a Marino - I decided 725 is a decent tubeset and it might leave some extra budget to get a few nicer components to go on it.

Set the main angles and measurements I think I want - but asked a number of questions about cable routing / butting / headtube standards / paint. I believe they’ll put together a picture labelled with the measurements to check on etc before paying the deposit. I want to check that all the measurements I haven’t specifically given are sensible given all the other detail I did give.

Paint wise I’m thinking maybe green or blue with either a subtle flip and / or metal flake in it.


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 4:12 pm
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Do it! Well worth it, now I'm considering their full susser...

Marino


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 6:00 pm
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wow, what a unique looking bike! Love the colour and the set up. The saddle looks a bit agricultural for my taste, but then it's not my bike I guess.


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 6:16 pm
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That looks cool in yellow! I’ve selected that seat tube / top tube brace with the curved piece, but a front small gusset between the tubes rather than a separate tube there.

What tyre size is that / what tyre size did you specifically needed to fit?

Sorry to ask questions but did you pay 20% VAT when you imported it or something different?


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 6:46 pm
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The curved brace tube at the St-tt junction is a good idea. It adds a little compliance (for local stress reasons not rider comfort). I've seen a couple of frames where they switched the design from straight brace tubes (that cracked) to curved braces as the fix.


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 7:39 pm
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Mick-R - I picked it because I thought it looked nicer / more unusual than a straight brace 😝


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 8:04 pm
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Double win 🙂

Extended seat tubes can be surprisingly hard to get right.....

[url= https://i.postimg.cc/CKPCyYxY/20190311-213816.jp g" target="_blank">https://i.postimg.cc/CKPCyYxY/20190311-213816.jp g"/> [/img][/url]


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 9:26 pm
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Is that a crack?

I’ve specced a 395mm seat tube so hopefully however the stays / top tube come together there’s not too much length to crack. That said I ideally want it to look like the top tube flows into the seat stays so will see how it looks.


 
Posted : 06/07/2020 10:58 pm
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Got sent this pic yesterday of my frame now to tubes are welded and the clearcoat is on.
Should be here in a couple of weeks.
Shame I'll still be broken and unable to ride it.
Hoping to be fixed enough to at least get it built up.
[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50094841902_c1ae975799_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/50094841902_c1ae975799_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2jjHadJ ]Marino Custom Frame In 725[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/stu-b/ ]multispeedstu[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 10/07/2020 5:26 pm
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Looks great - did you go 4130 or 725 - I forget?

I’ve opted for 725 and had said 2 internal routes cables and brake external but I think I’ve changed my mind and will go all 3 internal. Went for the curved seat post brace - And I had opted for the brace between the tubes at the head tube but I think I want the 2 small gussets on each tube now having looked at a load of photos from Marino.

I’m assumed he’s stacked at the moment as I haven’t heard anything back yet. I had a play on bike cad earlier in the week and think I’ve pretty much decided on the angles / measurements now. Only thing I’m not sure about is the Bottom bracket offset - not sure if I can just leave that blank or if it needs something in there?

These are the angles on bikecad and a frame similar to what I’m after in terms of gussets:

[url= https://i.postimg.cc/d0NgRH19/B32-C2-D3-F-C1-D1-4669-9622-796-CAE9-EC202.jp g" target="_blank">https://i.postimg.cc/d0NgRH19/B32-C2-D3-F-C1-D1-4669-9622-796-CAE9-EC202.jp g"/> [/img][/url]

[url= https://i.postimg.cc/gkSYtDnn/B2-B22-B91-A539-4-D98-BA81-FF3011718-A93.jp g" target="_blank">https://i.postimg.cc/gkSYtDnn/B2-B22-B91-A539-4-D98-BA81-FF3011718-A93.jp g"/> [/img][/url]


 
Posted : 10/07/2020 8:37 pm
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@JoeBristol: I've bought my frame from the guy who changed his mind, wish it was straight from Peru! No idea on the tax I'm afraid but I'll text the original owner and if I have any news I'll let you know.
As I've had no say over the matter this frame will only accept 27.5 x 3" or 29 x 2.6" however I reckon I could squeeze 2.8" at the back...

Changed the setup slightly, still love it to bits:
marino


 
Posted : 15/07/2020 5:19 pm
Posts: 10225
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Your picture link seems to have died for some reason.

That’s quite a wide tyre fitment in that frame - I’ve asked Marino what selecting 2.5” tyres actually means in terms of width between the stays. My current frame (Vitus Sentier) has a lot of tyre clearance as it’s meant to fit up to a 2.8” 27.5 tyre - although I’ve no intention of running anything that big - I usually run a 2.3” aggressor or dhr2. Wondering about running something with a little more volume to make it more comfy but faster rolling.

Hoping maybe the steel Marino frame might be slightly more forgiving than the pretty still alloy one as my back is a bit ruined from a previous bulged disc injury. Not had a steel frame since having a Gary Fisher Mamba in the late 1990’s - that was a £400 bike with RS Quadra 5’s so I’m expecting this Marino frame or be a bit posher than that (I think the Mamba was double butted 4130 main frame with straight gauge stays).


 
Posted : 16/07/2020 10:17 am

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