Tuesday, May 8, 2012

The Internet of Bikes: Penn Bay YMCA Time Trial (Maine Time Trial Series Race #1)


The Penn Bay YMCA Time Trial is the first race of the Maine Time Trial series. The course is a 16 mile out an back that features gradual climbs, fast descents, long, open straight sections and strong winds. About 50 riders turn up for this race. This is the first race for Frame and Wheel on an Austro-Daimler tt Carbon. Frame and Wheel sets out soon after 9 am. There is a tail wind on the out bound section, but it is hard to notice. Frame and Wheel concentrates on the road, position and gearing. The road is rough in sections. The climb up to the turn around is as challenging as in previous years. A strong head wind greets all riders after the turnaround. The climb at mile ten brings out the drool and the following wind swept straights torture the mind. The Reduced Speed Ahead sign means that the finish line is 500 meters up the road at the end of a gradual climb. The race is over. Frame and Wheel’s time is 33:21 (2011: 33:45) and fast enough to win the day. Frame and Wheel congratulates everyone on their results and thanks the organizers for putting on what is a classic time trial race.




Frame and Wheel joins Doug Chaisson, Nate Smith and Nate Davis for a post race ride around Searsmont, Lincolnville and Hope. A great route that features some impressive vistas and the climb up the suitably named Hatchett Mountain.

The Internet of Bikes: Quabbin Reservoir Classic Road Race 2012



Frame and Wheel joins Eric Larrson and Eric Weinrich of the OA / Cyclemania Masters Cycling Team for the Quabbin Reservoir Classic Road Race in Ware, Massachusetts. The race is a popular and legendary race that features 4,000 feet of climbing, fast downhills and extraordinary vistas of the Quabbin Reservoir. Temperatures are in the upper 30s at the start and conditions are dry and clear (a wild improvement over 2011). About 80 riders line up for the 62 mile route in the forty plus category (Frame and Wheel almost misses the start to this event due to a Bike Talk-induced navigational Tronski that added an extra one hour to the drive).
There is an early and dangerous break that quickly gains one minute and the wheel van. Frame and Wheel is in no position to chase and rationalizes that there is a lot of climbing to be done and the wind is strong. Additionally, the field has many strong riders and it picks up a lot of speed on the big downhills. Frame and Wheel sits in. The race at times begins to feel like the Portland Velo Club Saturday morning ride: relaxed but brisk, unofficial but serious. Frame and Wheel is well-hydrated and well fed. 
The break is in view on the straight sections outside of Ware. The pace is high on Route  Nine; the break is out of sight but not far up the road. The field enters the park road and riders jostle for position. Finally, there is a genuine attack that strings out the field. Frame and Wheel joins in and gets to the front. The break is now in view and it looks tired. Frame and Wheel bridges over and gets to the break at 200 meters and from there goes for the finish. A glance under the arm reveals that there is a gap. There is a shout of encouragement from a single by stander. The line finally arrives and the race is over. Frame and Wheel makes brief salute, hoping that there is Graham Watson apostle covering this event who will immortalize Frame and Wheel’s first victory on an Austro-Daimler Superleicht in twenty-eight years (no such luck).Frame and Wheel congratulates team members and competitors on their performances and thanks the race organizers for putting on a great race.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Frame and Wheel races an Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 at 2012 Tour of the Battenkill


Frame and Wheel joins Ron Bourgoin, Neil Fitch and Eric Weinrich of the OA / Cyclemania Masters Cycling Team in the 40 plus category at the 2012 Tour of the Battenkill otherwise known as “The Hell of the North”. Temperatures are in the mid 50s at the start and conditions are dry. One hundred and twenty one riders line up for the 62 mile route that features steep climbs, dirt roads and the bucolic scenery of upstate New York.
This year the peleton stays together over the climbs on Perry Hill Road, Juniper Swamp Road and Cemetery Road. The dirt sections on Cheese Factory Road and Wright Road become the features of the race. The sand is deep in places, the rocks are big and the dust at times obscures the lead car and portions of the field. The crack of rocks ricocheting off of carbon and expletives penetrate the roar of shaking bicycles and their riders. Frame and Wheel switches religions at least three times and struggles to get to and stay at the front of the field. Riders are fishtailing in sections; some riders lose momentum completely and come to an abrupt stop. Remarkably, there are no bad crashes. Frame and Wheel follows the advice of cyclocross guru John Grenier: keep the RPMs low and stay seated. 
Somewhere towards the end of Wright Road, a break of five riders suddenly forms including Thomas Francis, (Wheelwroks Racing), Jacob Hacker, Ted Michaels (Evolution Cycling Club), Dan Staffo (Handlebars Cycling Company) and Frame and Wheel. There is a 30 second gap and the five work together to maintain it through to Stage Road. Thomas Francis and Frame and Wheel struggle to keep up on the this final climb and lose time. On the final flat section, however, the two work together and close to within meters on the three other riders who are absorbed in the traditional game of cat and mouse.  At the 1K mark that game ends abruptly when the three see that they are about to be joined by two more riders; the three keep their gap. Jacob Hacker wins the day, followed by Ted Michaels and Dan Staffo. Frame and Wheel crosses the line in fourth place with Thomas Francis seconds behind.
The race is much more challenging for Frame and Wheel this year. In previous years, Frame and Wheel has the luxury of being in small and early breakaways, primarily the result of Joe Bean Road. This year Frame and Wheel must endure riding in a large pack, frequent accelerations and the stress and trauma of riding blindly over very rough dirt roads. Thus, Frame and Wheel is very pleased with the result and congratulates Ron, Neil and Eric on their results. Most importantly, team mates and competitors have come through relatively unscathed; the Austro-Daimler Superleicht has also survived its first race. Frame and Wheel purchases a bottle of Battenkill Valley Creamery Chocolate Milk and heads for home.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Customer comments for Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2

Frame and Wheel posts eBay feedback and comments from owners of the Austro-Daimler Superleicht carbon Di2 below. 

Chris - United Kingdom
eBay feedback
One word. Awesome!
Other comments
Just got the frame! Wow.  We are very happy. It is beautiful. Can't wait for us to get it going. Just to let you know this is not only my best ever eBay purchase experience, but a great retail experience as well. Thanks again!
Hanspeter - Austria
eBay feedback
Great seller, excellent product, ultra fast shipment, AAA+++
Other comments
The frame set arrived and I´m very happy. Hopefully I will find time tomorrow afternoon to visit RIH and discuss the built-up of the bike. I´ll keep you informed.
Bryan - United States
eBay feedback
Outstanding service and great bicycle frame excellent company AAA++++
Other comments
What a beautiful artfully crafted light frame! Everything arrived in excellent condition. I'm researching the equipment I want to use on the build and will let you know which bike shop I choose. I'll be returning the box empty. When I settle on the shop completing the build I'll let you know.

Mark - United Kingdom

eBay feedback
As described and quick postage. Thanks! Looking forward to getting out on it!

Monday, January 30, 2012

Frame and Wheel reviews the Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 road bike


Frame and Wheel reviews Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 
The Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 road bike is a modern day version of the Austro-Daimler Superleicht racing bike used by amateur and professional cyclists in the 1980s. It is wildly different from its ancestor in terms of technology and materials, but the spirit and beauty of the bicycle is unchanged. Frame and Wheel has been riding this Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 for six months now and provides some thoughts about it below.

Designed for Di2
The frame is designed expressly for Shimano’s Di2 electronic drive train. Cable stops are absent and there is an opening on the bottom bracket and the down tube to accommodate wires and junctions. Frame and Wheel’s view on electronic shifting is that it is like air conditioning: once you start using it, you never go back. The practical benefits include a very easy shift from small chain ring into big chain ring and quick and easy rear derailleur adjustment. Frame and Wheel notes that when your hands are numb with cold, electronic shifting is very useful. It is also useful for master’s category hands that have been weakened by a life time of keyboard work. There also seems to be less chain slap when riding over rough road. A single charge lasts a long time and the the battery charges up very quickly. It is very easy to forget to charge the battery and even easier to forget to bring the charger to training camps or stage races. These are iTronskis (for more about iTronskis, please read this post) that the user will commit only once. Frame and Wheel’s 50 cm frame set is built up with Shimano Dura-Ace 7900 Di2, 3T stem and 3T Rotundo bars and Zipp 303 tubular wheels. The weight for the bike as shown is 14.8 pounds.

Think powerful luxury sedan
The Superleicht’s geometry is slack (71.5 head tube angle and 74 degrees seat tube angle) and the wheel base is long (98.4 cm) and thus the bicycle tracks very well and feels stable on the descents and in the corners. Frame and Wheel likens the ride to a powerful, luxury sedan: smooth, silent and very comfortable for long rides. The chain stays, down tube and seat tube are oversized and explain the bike’s wonderful stiffness and acceleration. Other features of the frame set include tapered head tube, asymmetrical top tube, a full carbon Austro-Daimler 37SL front fork, full carbon Austro-Daimler 31.6 mm seat post, full internal cabling, front and rear carbon drop outs, English thread bottom bracket (68 mm), replaceable rear derailleur hanger, braze-on front derailleur hanger and pearl white paint finish. 
Frame and Wheel rides an Austro-Daimler Superleicht in 1986.
Frame and Wheel rides an Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 in 2011.
The voice
Every bicycle has a voice that speaks directly to its rider. For Frame and Wheel, the Austro-Daimler Superleicht Carbon Di2 speaks sentimentally of the days of racing in New England, Colorado and France in the 80s and 90s and youthful but unrequited dreams of glory. For others, the Superleicht will perhaps speak invitingly of electronic shifting, 1980s styling and comfortable geometry. For some, no voice will be heard. Frame and Wheel’s view is that the bicycle is a great pleasure to ride and looks forward to racing it in 2012. 
Specifications:
Brand: Austro-Daimler
Model: Superleicht Carbon Di2
Material: Unidirectional high modulus carbon fiber
Frame design: compact geometry road
Front fork: Austro-Daimler 37SL
Seat post: Austro-Daimler carbon
Front and rear derailleur: Shimano Dura-Ace 7900 Di2
Dual control levers: Shimano Dura-Ace 7900 Di2
Cassette, bottom bracket, chain: Shimano Dura-Ace 7900
Crank set: Shimano Dura-Ace 7900 170 mm 53T/39T
Pedals: Shimano Dura-Ace 7900 SL Carbon
Bar and stem: 3T Rotundo carbon classic and 3T ARX Team alloy stem
Seat: Fizik Aliante Ti
Wheel set: Zipp 303 carbon tubular
Tires: Vittoria Corsa EVO CX 21-28
Total weight  as shown: 14 pounds 12 ounces (6.7 kg) size 50 cm as shown
The frame sets are available through no-reserve auction at the at the Frame and Wheel eBay Store. Please sign up for the news letter to learn of upcoming auctions. For more information about Frame and Wheel and the frame set, please visit the website.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Frame and Wheel Puerto Rico winter training camp

Puerto Rico is fine destination for a winter training camp. The climate is warm, terrain is challenging and there are plenty of things to do when the riding is done (the beach, Old San Juan, great restaurants). Additionally, there are numerous direct flights from the east coast, there are good bike shops and there is a local cycling scene. Isle Verde is a good area to stay. There is a super market nearby, it is near the city and it provides for convenient access to the rides around El Yunque National Park. There are many apartments for rent in Puerto Rico, but you have to book in advance as Christmas and New Years is peak time for Puerto Rico. Renting a car also requires booking in advance. The traffic is not too bad outside of San Juan, and it is very light on the back roads in the mountains. Drivers are respectful of cyclists for the most part, but caution is required. Frame and Wheel notes that there is no yellow line on the roads in the mountains so staying under control and well to the right is essential (many drivers coming uphill swing well over the yellow line). "Oyo" means pot hole and is an important word when riding in a group. "Ola" is an informal greeting and an effective warning for others.  The temperatures are in the 80s during the day. In the early morning there can be light rain. In the mountains, temperatures are cooler and the roads can be wet and slick. There is no cell phone coverage in El Yunque national park, but coverage is fine everywhere else.
Route 187 leads from Isla Verde to Loiza, Suarez and Rio Grande and is the primary thorough fare for getting to the rides in the hills east and south of the city. It is straight and flat and requires 100 percent vigilance for cars passing in the other direction. In the afternoon, there also iguanas to look out for. There are deep and large potholes on all the roads and they can appear out of nowhere on otherwise smooth pavement. In the mountains and in El Yunque national park, the roads can be rough, especially in the corners of the switchbacks. Clinchers with some tough tires are a must. There are dogs too. Most are confined to their owners compounds, but some escape and give chase (Frame and Wheel was pursued twice by the same Rotweiller). A good rule of thumb is to not to build up too much speed on the downhills so that there is extra reaction time for those hazards and the more typical ones: cars backing out of driveways, pedestrians, drainage grates).
The rides are productive and can be viewed at Frame and Wheel on Strava Cycling. Frame and Wheel recommends repeats on the El Yunque park road from the welcome center to the top. The traffic gets busy with tourists, but then it calms down. It allows for a good ride without having to venture too far out and away from home base. A harder ride is to go south on Route 956 to the peak and then down the back side on Route 957, turn around and head back up Route 957 and down Route 956. There are some very steep sections here. Route 185 after Benitiez is quite busy and not worth the stress. Route 3 is rideable, but it is a busy big road that is more effective as a means for getting to the smaller roads in the hills. Frame and Wheel just scratched the surface of the potential rides in Puerto Rico. Renting a car and heading an hour out of town will open up some great terrain.
Roland Marrero is a great guide and mechanic from The Bike Stop. Jose at B.Bikes runs a nice shop and is in the Isla Verde area. It is worth calling these shops in advance to find out about local rides. The fortress at Old San Juan is a great visit, but do not drive into town. Traffic is terrible. 
A note on flying: Frame and Wheel used JetBlue. The flight was on time and comfortable. If you can get your bike into the standard size travel case (around 60 x 40 x 10 inches) and it weighs less than 50 pounds, it will count as your checked in bag and thus will not incur an oversize or overweight fee. IF you have another checked in bag, you will have to pay $30.00 for that one. Be sure you know the rules as the agents checking you in do not always know how it works.

Route 956

The blue pave of of Old San Juan

The fort at Old San Juan

Flats along Route 187

Drainage grating in Loiza

Clinchers and Paves

Top of El Yunque park road

Back road climbs



Route 181 above Gurabo
Route 9966 into El Yunque National Park

Water falls in El Yunque National Park

El Yunque Park roads

View from Route 956

View from Route 956

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Outside the Bike: the frame set as a cell phone

Demand for cycling is inelastic
Frame and Wheel reads that demand for bicycles and bicycle equipment remains relatively strong despite tough economic conditions and speculates that this is because for many people, riding a bicycle for health, competition or transportation is an important part of their daily lives and something that they cannot do with out. An economist would say that demand for cycling is inelastic. Frame and Wheel observes that demand for telecommunications is also inelastic: individuals want very much to be able to communicate and are unlikely to terminate their cell phone subscription when times are hard. They will more likely stop going out for dinner and movies. People pay for cell phones so that they can have access to others in the form of voice calls or emails, which for most people is very important. 
It is about the experience
Cyclists pay for their bicycles and gear so that they can have access to new and existing experiences on their bikes, stay fit or get to where they want to go. Frame and Wheel has always thought that cycling is about many things including the experience that occurs when you are on the bike: the reverie, the camaraderie, the freedom, the sunrise, the fox, the idiot driving the SUV while talking on the cell phone, the climb, the field sprint, the drama. In a funny way, we communicate when we are on a bike ride: we communicate with ourselves, with others and we actively or passively absorb the surroundings. Frame and Wheel has been caught thinking many times that a bicycle is very much like a communications device and believes that the Internet of Things will transform how we own our bikes, pay for our bikes, ride our bikes and dispose of our bikes. Indeed, Frame and Wheel's mission is to facilitate that change.
Please elaborate in a post
Frame and Wheel asked visitors to the blog if they would ever pay for their bicycles based on the number of hours they used it. Sixty percent of the 35 respondents said no, 20 percent said please elaborate in a post, 14 percent said yes and the balance said maybe. Frame and Wheel believes that the responses suggest that consumers cautiously open to the idea, but very much against the idea of paying an hourly rate for  using a bicycle, perhaps because they want to own it. Frame and Wheel also asked blog visitors if they would pay for their bicycle the way they pay for a Netflix subscription. Seventeen percent of the 36 respondents said yes, forty-four percent said please elaborate in a post, 20 percent said no and another 20 percent maybe. The responses suggest that the market is curious about this idea, and prefers the option of paying a monthly sum rather than an hourly sum. 
iTronski
This summer, Frame and Wheel made the mistake of leaving an Android smart phone on the beach below the hight tide mark. In the few minutes that the smart phone was astray, it was completely soaked and ruined (This earned Frame and Wheel an iTronski). Frame and Wheel discovered that this smart phone, an HTC Incredible, which had been given to Frame and Wheel free of charge by the cell phone operator at the beginning of a two year contract, retails for $700. The service provider informed Frame and Wheel that the only available options were to buy another new Incredible or buy one second hand somewhere. The experience crystalized for Frame and Wheel the fact that the cost of smart phones are loaded into the monthly cost of a calling plan, and shattered the warm and fuzzy perception that cell pone operators just hand out these beautiful smart phone for free. This experience also allowed Frame and Wheel to obtain a better understanding of how mobile phone contracts are structured and Frame and Wheel will digress for a moment on this topic.
High costs low usage
Cell phone operators have huge fixed costs. The largest one is the network of cell phone towers, exchanges and other equipment that allows calls to be made and delivered. Add to that the labor, the trucks and the offices and it becomes clear that running a mobile phone network is very expensive. The only way cell phone operators can cover these costs is by charging airtime to cell phone users, and the only way they can charge users airtime is by getting them to sign up and pay a for cell phone. In the early days, the subscriber had to buy the phone at retail (sometimes from the cell phone operator) and then pay for the airtime based on the number of minutes they used it. The trouble with this approach was that the phones were very expensive (as well as cumbersome), and those who could afford to pay them used their phones for only a few minutes each day because the batteries for the cell phones didn’t last long, the air time charge was expensive and by the minute and there were plenty of perfectly fine or better fixed line phones still available, Cell phones operators were in a situation where subscriber growth was slow, usage was low and network expenses were high and getting higher. 
The virtuous circle
Everything changed when cell phone operators began to subsidize or absorb entirely the cost of the cell phone and integrate that cost into a two-year monthly calling plan. Suddenly, cell phones became much more affordable. Additionally, the monthly calling plan eliminated the perception of air time usage being expensive. The only wrinkle was the requirement to sign a two year contract with the cell phone operator, but consumers were fine with the commitment because they viewed a cell phone as a necessity (or their demand for telecommunications was inelastic). Subscriber growth and penetration increased, usage surged and cell phone operators were able to invest in expanding their networks, which led to a virtuous circle of growth and profitability. Frame and Wheel quantifies just how profitable the cell phone subsidy arrangement is for a cell phone operator below:
Rate of return for a subscriber paying $60 per month

Net cost of a phone ($)
Annual revenue ($)
Annual revenue ($)
Cash flows
(200)
720
720
Internal rate of return
342%


Required rate of return
10.0%


Net present value of subscriber
$954



Very high IRR
Frame and Wheel estimates that the internal rate of return on a single subscriber that pays $60 per month ($720 per year) for basic cell phone access is 345%. The rate of return is so high because the cell phone operator pays a wholesale price for the smart phone that it gives to its new subscriber. For some popular smart phones, the subscriber pays a token sum of say $99, which serves to lower the wholesale cost of the phone even more (Frame and Wheel arbitrarily estimates that the cell phone operator pays $200 whole sale for the smart phone in this example). 
Smart phone cost earned back quickly
This cost is earned back in just three months, and the rest of the revenue for the two year period and beyond is pure gravy. Additionally, the cash flows are stable and predictable and the chances are very good that the subscriber will come nowhere near the monthly limit which is good for keeping the network clear for those who do (even if the limit is exceeded, the subscriber pays the per minute rate). Of course, the operator has to pay operating expenses and continually invest in the network, but this example shows just how profitable combining subsidized cell phones with monthly calling plans has been for the industry.
Nationwide calling plans AT&T

Plan 1
Plan 2
Plan 3
Cost per month ($)
$60
$80
$100
Minutes of talk time per month
450
900
1,350
Hours of talk time per month
7.5
15.0
22.5
Cost per minute
$0.133
$0.089
$0.074
Cost per hour
$8.00
$5.33
$4.44
Cost per year
$720.00
$960.00
$1,200.00
Could it work for a frame set?
If a bicycle is a communications device, could this model work for a frame set? Frame and Wheel believes it could. Frame and Wheel looks at monthly calling plans available in the market today and translates them into hours as that is how Frame and Wheel and other cyclists track how much riding they are doing each day. Plan 1 costs $60 per month and allows the subscriber 450 minutes of talk time per month. This works out to $0.13 per minute. In terms of hours, the plan allows the subscriber 7.5 hours of talk time at a cost of $8.00 per hour. Plan 2 costs the subscriber $80 per month and allows for 15 hours of talk time per month at an hourly rate of $5.33 per hour. Plan 3 costs the subscriber $100 per month and allows for 22.5 hours of talk time at a cost of $4.44 per hour. Plan 1 cost the subscriber $720 per year at a minimum; Plan 2 cost $920 per year and Plan 3 cost $1,200 per year. A key point to note is that the subscriber pays the per minute rate on any minutes in excess of the monthly threshold. For example, if a Plan 1 subscriber exceeds the 450 minute threshold by 10 minutes, the subscriber is billed $13.30 in addition to the $60 monthly cost.
Hypothetical monthly subscription plan for a performance frame set

Monthly subscription plan
Cost per month ($)
$59
Minutes of ride time per month
1,800
Hours of ride time per month
30.0
Cost per minute
$0.03
Cost per hour
$1.95
Cost per year
$702.00

$59 per month for three years
Frame and Wheel believes that most cyclists consider telecommunications to be more of a necessity than cycling, but not by much, and thus estimates that a monthly subscription plan for a performance carbon frame set that retails for about $1,500 would be $59 per month. This plan assumes that the subscriber rides the frame set about 30 hours per month and thus targets dedicated cyclists. The key difference is that if the rider rides the frame set for more than 30 hours in a given month, there is no per minute charge in excess of the monthly cost. This is intended to incentive the the rider. The annual cost of this subscription is $7o2 per year.
Internal rate of return on a frame set subscription


Net cost of frame set ($)
Year 1 revenue ($)
Year 2 revenue ($)
Year 3 revenue ($)
Cash flows
(650)
702
702
702
Internal rate of return
93%



Required rate of return
10.0%



Net present value of frame set
$996




Internal rate of return of 93%
The internal rate of return on a frame set subscription is estimated to be 93 percent.  The net present value of the frame set is $996. At the end of the three year period, the frame set can be returned to the brand for a cash or credit payment. This mechanism keeps the rider on the road and keeps the frame set out of the land fills. Would there be a three year contract? Perhaps, and perhaps there would be a built insurance plan so that if the frame is damaged, it can be replaced at no cost to the rider. Another critical element of this model is how to implement it and monitor it. Frame and Wheel believes that subscribers will obtain this service through an existing on-line application provider. Frame and Wheel appreciates that this all sounds pretty outlandish, but the same could have been said ten years ago about the idea of uploading rides to the Internet moments after you finished them. Frame and Wheel will continue to refine this idea and think outside the bike.