Image of Curve Titanosaur courtesy of Curve Cycling. |
The idea was so appealing to this man that he was certain it would work, if only.....
If only wheels and tires existed that would be tuned for such riding. All that did exist at that point were items meant for the niche of unicycling. That one-wheeled vehicle whose gearing was determined by wheel diameter only. To get "lower" gearing you had to build a unicycle with a smaller wheel. 20" and 24" being very popular wheel sizes for unicycles. But for over-the-road cycling, those smaller diameter wheels presented "too low a gear", as it were. So bigger hoops were made. The 29"er tires made this more available, but what about larger wheels than that?
That's where 32" and 36" wheels came into play for unicyclists. In 2006 the market for such behemoth sized 'wagon wheels' was super small. So, the available parts reflected that. They were heavy, reliable but heavy.
Late into 2006 Ben Witt, then the owner of Milltown Cycles in Faribault, Minnesota, had a nutty idea: Take those heavy 36"er unicycle tires and wheels and make a bicycle out of that! And so he did. By February of 2007 he had the finished, but unpainted bike, in the parking lot of parts distributor Quality Bicycle Products and was letting people ride it. I was one of those folks.
Image of a Salsa El Mariachi 29"er next to Ben Witt's 36"er. (Image courtesy of Ben Witt) |
Ben is the "father" of modern 36"ers, as far as I am concerned. No one else was doing this in 2006/07 when Ben had Mike Pofahl braze up that frame and when Ben hand-cut the tread into the heavy 36"er tires.
Of course, there were things that weren't that great about this idea and this bike in particular. The wheels were ponderous. Due to the straight-gauge, super-long spokes, the brakes were kind of winding up the wheel, and with all that momentum, a typical MTB disc brake was getting pretty over-worked. The geometry of the frame and fork weren't completely realized either. That said, the bike was amazingly fun to ride and the idea sparked off a 36"er movement across the world. Eventually. by 2011, the company, Dirty Sixer came along and started making more 36"er bikes for big and tall folks. This sparked enough activity to warrant lighter tires, rims, better geometries, and other fine details which made 36"ers a "real" viable bicycle, not a novelty item.
Image courtesy of Curve Cycling |
With modernized carbon rims, "real" tires that are tubeless, and geometry dialed in, I have no doubt that this bike would ride amazingly well. I know it looks goofy, but that's just us not being around 36" wheels, that's all. I mean, people thought the same about 29"er wheels in 2003, but who thinks a 29"er wheel looks "weird" now? Not may do. We're used to them.
Will 36"ers be a more commonly seen bike? Doubtful, but you may spy one here or there. They are really best for folks 6ft-plus. The Curve marketing blurb states that this could fit someone as short as 5'7", but.....yeah. You're going to see this more often under 6'4"-plus sized riders than shorter than that height.
But it is super-cool, and while I cannot vouch for that frame builder's opinion given to me in 2006, I'd sure give this a try to find out if he was right all along.
4 comments:
I’m SO glad someone wants to bring this to life. This was a bike shop fantasy conversation at least as far back as the ‘80s. I’m so glad you got to try one out. I hope this makes it to production. Will it always be a niche? Sure. We have room for lots of niche bikes.
Thanks for covering this!
Pretty interesting. As a 6'3 dude, I was intrigued enough to look up the U.S. / Austrailian dollar conversion, but not quite intrigued enough to pull the trigger : )
I’m stoked that it’s finally coming to life as a real bike. I’m sure there are 20 people crazy enough to take the leap!!
Thanks Guitar Ted for mentioning DirtySixer bikes. It's one weird thing in bike industry is that it's rare when brand pays respect to their inspiration. Since the start of DirtySixer I've mentioned several times the people that helped me dial the geometry and certain technical aspects of my bikes: Bryan Keener, Walt of WaltWorks, Todd (ex Blacksheep and owner James), Kaos, Ben Witt (Milltown cycle), Kiwi bikes, Stoic, that I interviewed many times! I've credited Ventana owner Sherwood Gibson who produced several years the DirtySixer for his tremendous help in the development. So I guess it goes the same way for actual fabrication: I am transparent about my Taiwan production by family owned makers that work for many other big brands...
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