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Business hours

Monday: 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Tuesday: 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Wednesday: 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Thursday: 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

Friday: 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM

All times are (GMT-06:00) Central America

Best time to call

During business hours

Founded

January 1, 1993

Company bio

IT’S AS MUCH ABOUT WHO YOU ARE AS IT IS WHAT YOU ARE
Most frame builders are craftsmen above all else. We all love working with our hands and building frames as perfect as humanly possible. It takes many years and many frames to build proficiently—and even longer to build at the quality level that the current group of masters does. But frame building is only part of the equation.

Your bicycle frame starts with you, the customer. It isn’t some inanimate object that’s built in the corner of a shop somewhere. Your frame is an extension of your personality, priorities, and goals. The true art of frame building lies in the builder’s ability to divine from you exactly what you want and what you don’t even know you want, what you need and what you don’t know you need.

What separates us from most of our competitors is not the fact that we’ve built thousands of frames or that our frames are straighter and have prettier welds. What separates our work from our competitors is the process we’ve developed over the last 20 years. The process of learning, understanding, and quantifying your goals and priorities to convert them to the frame design we’ll ultimately build for you.

Owner's bio:

Bicycles have been the center of my life since I can remember. I’m not sure at what age but some of my best and earliest memories are of me and my brother going to BMX races. I loved my bikes and if I wasn’t riding, racing or going to school I was working on them

In Jr high I built a mini-bike from scratch in metal shop. Mr. Earl was the teacher and he was the pivotal individual that set me on the path I’m on today. For most of my life I’ve raced bicycles and commuted on my bike. In ‘85′ I bought a mountain bike for commuting and that set the MTB hook. When I was in my late teens and early 20’s I got serious about road racing as well as mountain bike racing and also tried my hand at a little motorcycle road racing.

I always performed my own mechanical repairs and fabricated parts that weren’t available or I couldn’t afford to buy. Through this I developed a very broad skill-set. When you race anything, you learn to pay attention to details, to be precise and to always be on the technological leading edge. In my early 20’s I moved to Montana and immediately became heavily involved in regional road bike and MTB racing and also tried a little auto and kart racing. During all of this I was trying to figure out what I wanted to do with my life. I knew I didn’t want to work for anyone else, but couldn’t figure out what I wanted to do. Sense the only thing I was interested in was riding and working on bicycles it made sense to explore frame building.