
This simple Brompton build has an Alfine-11 hub gear with Jtek shifter.

Folding Bikes, Recumbent Bikes & Trikes, Cargo Bikes, Tandems, Custom Framebuilding

This simple Brompton build has an Alfine-11 hub gear with Jtek shifter.

This Brompton has a Rohloff 14-speed hub with Cinq5 shifters, and Hope hydraulic disc brakes.

This Brompton has a Rohloff hub with integral rear rack, Big Apple wheel and TRP HY/RD disc brake on the front.

This belt drive Brompton with integrated rear rack has my new sliding dropout system for belt installation and adjustment. It’s got an Alfine-11 hub gear and cable disc brakes.

This custom Brompton has brushed stainless steel forks and rear triangle with integrated rack, Rohloff hub gearing, SON dynamo lighting and cable disc brakes. Continue reading “Papyrus and Stainless Rohloff Brompton”

This Lagoon Blue Brompton has a Rohloff 14-speed hub gear, SON dynamo lighting and hydraulic disc brakes.
This custom Brompton in the new metallic purple as a Rohloff hub with Cinq5 shifters, SON dynamo lighting, hydraulic disc brakes and an integral rack.
It doesn’t really feel like half a lifetime since I quit a perfectly good job as a Mainframe Systems Programmer with IBM, to make a full-time hobby of running an unusual bike business! It seemed a pretty rash thing to do back then.
I recently found my first (and only) business plan. It makes some interesting reading, in some places ridiculously optimistic – I estimated £100 for tools and £100 for parts! Some other ideas didn’t work out, but the basic idea of a business specialising in niche and unusual bikes has surprisingly worked. Back then, the internet was young and the idea of online selling didn’t really exist – now, of course, none of us would manage without it. One of the biggest differences comparing that old business plan to now is that I just didn’t anticipate we’d have customers all over the world.
Back then, we started out doing repairs like any normal bike shop – that picture up there is Andrew, my mechanic – but over the years the normal bike shop things have died away and been replaced by much more manufacturing and unusual bikes. Life is quite tough for a lot of bike shops at the moment, so I’d like to think this was a clever and prescient move, but really it was mostly accidental!
So, thank you everyone who’s been a customer over those 20 years.
Ben 😉

This promotional chopper for a weightlifting company was mostly made out of bits of weightlifting equipment – it was an interesting project!