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The On One Inbred circa 2006 |
Okay folks, if you are a long time reader of this blog, you know the story of this bike goes back.......
like waaaaay back! This was a bike I had, really liked, got rid of, wished I had back, never thought I'd see again, and ended up
getting it back! That almost never happens.
It is a bike that has some special meaning to me for a couple of reasons. I used it on my first attempt at the very first Dirty Kanza 200 in 2006. I also used it in 2007 when I was part of a team of 4 at a 12 hour MTB event which our team won. (Never mind we were the only 4 man team entered into the 12 hour event!)
The bike rode like a really nice steel framed bike should-
smooooove! Yes, that is a technical term, and I am sorry if it leaves you baffled, but there is no other way to describe this in the English language. <==HA!
Anyway, one ting led to another. I got the reviewing gigs, parts and bike were piling up. The Inbred wasn't getting used. A co-worker expressed interest in it and purchased it from me with the caveat that I had first dibs on it if it were to be sold by him. Of course, he loved the bike. Why wouldn't he? It was great. He passed it on to his brother, and then it fell out of my reckoning. You can read a bit about that, and what happened to the original fork
here.
The bike that replaced the Inbred was my OS Bikes Blackbuck, so I did well with that! At least it wasn't a downgrade, and arguably, it was a better bike, being single speed specific, which I was more into. Still am, actually. This '05 Inbred was a "compromise" bike. Neither single speed nor geared, it had provisions for both things.
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This is myself at the first DK200. Image by the late Joel Dyke |
So, back then I figured I had done the right thing, but that Inbred haunted me. I still liked the way it rode a lot. Then I had the chance to get into a single speed specific rendition of the Inbred a few years later. I thought,
I hoped that it would be the same bike. That smooth riding machine that I used to have, only now in single speed specific form.
Well, despite the fact that the "Inbred the 2nd" rode really well as a single speed, it wasn't
that bike that I remembered. It was stiffer, and well.......
different. I still have it, by the way, and it works well for what it is, but it wasn't what I had remembered from the original bike.
But then it didn't matter, really. I mean, I wasn't ever going to see that original bike again. I had moved on anyway. I was into 'gravel bikes' now. Not MTB. "Real" gravel bikes weren't like that original On One Inbred. We had 'adventure warts' and carbon forks, and decent, well thought out gravel bike geometry. What in the heck would I do with that old Inbred anyway? I didn't need another single speed, much less another single speed mountain bike. I already have some of those!
But it was my second 29"er, and I am sentimental and all that. Bad things when you like stuff like bicycles and guitars! So, I knew that if my old co-worker ever rang me up and said that the ol' Inbred was up for sale that I'd likely bite the bullet and pay whatever price it was going to be to get it back. Whatever the condition of it was at the time. Scary thought, but probably true.
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Then one day about four years ago....... |
Maybe some of you long time readers will remember that in May of 2016 I came into work at my old job and there was my old Inbred! Sitting on my bench, partially built up! What?!! Well, the guy I sold it to had gotten it back from his brother and remembered that I still wanted first dibs on it. But instead of having me buy it, he just gifted it to me! I was blown away by his gesture, and still am.
The only bad thing? No fork, and these were bikes designed around 80mm travel suspension forks. Somewhat like early 90's MTB's designed around 63mm travel forks, these early 29"ers really don't like longer forks. So, the project sat stuck in nuetral. But......
I had the old bike back!
There was a carbon fork for this bike with an aluminum crown, but I sold it as well, since I had zero use for it with no Inbred to put it on. (The SS specific Inbred was 100mm travel compatible) Then the OG steel fork came back, but it was battered and beaten until cracked. No good! Again, you can read all about that
here.
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The Inbred as it sits now in 2020. |
Obviously, the carbon fork got bought back, and so I was able to reassemble the bike. I decided against going with a single speed in the end since, as I said above, I really don't need that bike. I did go with a sort of Fargo-ish build, since the 18" Inbred was a tad on the short side for me anyway. That plays perfectly into a drop bar build, and so that's what I did. It is a hodge-podge of parts that I had about. The controls and handle bar were take-offs from my old Gen 2 Fargo. The set up comes from the 2015 attempt of the DK200- A ten speed Gevenalle shifter on a 9 speed cassette. Yes-
that is not supposed to work and don't try it. I only have ridden about a thousand miles with it that way. That's all! Anyway, that will get changed soon as I have a ten speed cassette coming available from another bike I own. The wheels were originally some Velocity hoops laced to Velocity hubs, but I did not like that set of wheels. So, I sold them. These wheels are the take-offs from the (Trek) Sawyer I have. The front shifter is a bar-con friction shifter. Brakes are ancient Avid BB-7's.
This bike will be getting that aforementioned cassette, new red bar tape, and then it should be good to go. This wheel and tire combination seems to suit the bike far better than the older one, so I have high hopes that this set up will end up being the one I stick with. These new Tearavail Ehline 2.3"ers on the wheels are pretty fast and feel great. Much, much better than the WTB Rangers I tried before. The Sawyer's old wheels, a Deore hubbed Bontrager Duster set up, are merely workmanlike and nothing special, so maybe, if I end up sticking with this for the foreseeable future, I will upgrade.
And that brings the Inbred back to life and into 2020. If you'd have asked me about this bike in 2015, I would have laughed. It's been a long road back for the ol' thing. Guess I got lucky to even have a second go at it.