THE Framebuilding Website!


Frameforum is a site dedicated to the art and craft of the handmade bicycle. It’s about the people who make them; it’s about the people who ride them.
Frameforum is the place to be if you’re considering the 'custom alternative' – a bike that gives you everything  'off-the-shelf ' bikes don’t.


It’s about you - not Mr or Ms. Average.
A custom  bike is more than just a paint job.  A custom bike isn't about shaving grams for bragging rights either.  It’s about you and your builder considering every aspect of the bike. The process starts with finding the best dimensions, followed by designing and building the frame, then deciding on each and every component part of the bike - your  bike.

A bike that's been custom-built for you will fit you better than a stock bike ever could.  It can be as individual as you are; it can suit your particular style of riding, your particular needs and be built from a material that suits you ...  not the coffee stop crew.

Frameforum is also a great place those who build, or aspire to build, custom bikes.
In the forum section, you’ll find members embarking on their first steps in framebuilding as well as some of the greats of the framebuilding game; iconic builders making iconic bikes. If you want to ask questions and get answers on frame building from the folks who actually build them, this is the place.

In short; if handmade bicycles are your thing - whether rider, collector or creator - make Frameforum your first port of call!

 
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About the Wheels...

Alistair Gow has been a stalwart of the West of Scotland cycling community for more years than he cares to remember (or admit!).

He’s the archetypal ‘clubman’; a tireless worker for his club Glasgow Nightingale CC and a font of knowledge on all things cycling.


Over the years, he’s helped literally hundreds of Scottish cyclists find their feet when they first enter the sport; just read the chapter of Graeme Obree’s autobiography on his formative years in the bike game to find out the part "Big Al" played in Graeme’s transition from 'gringo’' to world beater.

As if that wasn’t enough, he’s also a first-rate wheelbuilder and mechanic.

With his encyclopaedic knowledge of hubs, rim types and spoke lengths, he’s the man Scottish bikies go to when they need ‘real’ wheels. The West of Scotland is hard on riders and hard on equipment. In this age of boutique, factory-built hoops with exotic lacing patterns, he’s as busy now as he ever was. Gram-shaving ‘for racing only’ stuff doesn’t really cut it around here.

Alistair’s talent for building wheels  means his small but well-stocked shop, Wheelcraft, in the picture-postcard village of Clachan of Campsie, is a magnet for local riders.  Pick up your wheels from Alistair, and he’ll tell you to drop them back for a quick check-over after a few hundred miles. Chances are they’ll need no adjustment, thanks to Alistair’s ability to get it right first time and his good judgement in applying just the right number of turns on the nipples.

For this set of wheels, only one requirement was made – silver rims. Alistair settled on the Ambrosio Evolution for their consistent quality, their resilience, and importantly, the cost of replacement if a rim gets pretzelled. Like I said, the roads round here are hard on equipment and no rim is invulnerable to Scottish pot holes.

If you’re ever close by, pop in and say hello. You’re sure of a warm welcome, a hot coffee or a cold beer. Oh, and a disapproving glance at your boutique wheels.....

 

Alistair after all, knows best!

title imageOK, so you've read the book, taken the course and bought the jig. You've completed your first forays into the wide and wonderful world of custom framebuilding.  So, what's next?

Well, how you present your product is of paramount importance – and  perhaps one of the biggest reasons behind the success or failure of budding frame marques.  In the minds of the bike-buying and riding public, an eye-catching color scheme and professionally designed and produced graphics speaks volumes.  For today's fickle consumer, it not only has to ride well, it has to look good too.  Image is everything, and today's rider is every bit as concerned over image as they are with equipment decisions...

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