Friday, 13 January 2012

S&M Bikes 20MM race fork with a thru-axle

Looks like S&M Bikes are stepping up the ante when it comes to having thru-axles. They already have a 20mm thru fork so this was the next step. And I might add, that is a very interesting way of lacing the wheel, from what I can see

Friday, 6 January 2012

Supercross Bolt LT

With all the aluminium BMX race frames out there, it is great to see that Bill Ryan of Supercross still sticking to the roots of BMX and releasing a chromoly race frame. This is the frame that can be used for racing and in the off-peak racing season (if there is any like it used to be) can be used to session the trails. It will last longer than an aluminium BMX bike and it is a lot more resilient as well. The features of the bike, according to the Supercross website are:
  • Triple Butted Air Hardened 4130 Cro-mo Frame Construction.
  • 4.2lb Pro Race Frame that can be used as an everyday race frame and trail bike
  • Same race winning geometry as the Supercross ENVY
  • Integrated Campy Style 45/45 Headtube with CNC’d LOGO
  • CNC Machined Euro BB shell ( 68mm Width )
  • Backside CNC’d Cro-mo Dropouts
  • Built in Low Profile Seatpost Clamp with replaceable Nut and Bolt ( Quick Release Compatible )
  • Uses a 27.2mm Seat Post
  • Tapered Chain and Seat Stays
  • Bullet Tipped Rear Stays

The bike is only very slightly heavier than its equivalent aluminium cousins but I bet that it would give a more comfortable ride. Thanks Bill. I respect your respect for the roots of BMX 


Thursday, 5 January 2012

The story nobody wants to report

My friend Jack Baruth, using the pen name Jim Boswell, wrote this article for BMX Basics years ago. BMX Basics was his site and he had some very interesting articles in it, including this one. I learnt a lot from Jack and I am glad to have him as my friend, even though we have never met in person.

Recently, there were some posts in Facebook about high-end BMX frames. Some pretty influential riders were praising these frames to the skies. This sends the wrong message to kids just starting out in racing. I should know. I started out with a crappy bike but I won races with that bike. I think Lance Armstrong was right...its the rider, not the bike. I thought it would be great if I posted this article up because it is very relevant. Hopefully, someone will learn something from it

The story nobody wants to report.

Did you ever play 'make-believe' as a kid? If you did, or even if you didn't, let's play it together, now. Let's make-believe that we are the people in charge of a large bicycle company, selling BMX, trail, and flatland bikes. We spend hundreds of thousands of dollars every year buying advertising, paying for our factory team, bribing the color mags to keep them from trashing our products in print, and promoting our brand in general. It's tough work. Worse yet, we long ago lost the battle for "coolness" to the Standards and S&Ms of the world. About the best thing anybody has to say about our bikes is that they are a good value.

Still with me? Okay, good. Let's pretend it's World Championships time. We pay to fly our top riders to the Worlds. Our Pro rider doesn't make the main - oops! That's yet another main event in which we won't be represented. In fact, it's hard to find a main event which features our bikes. Looks like another wasted weekend, right?

Except... We receive an email stating that one of the World Champions used one of our bikes to win! And better yet, he used the cheapest bike we make of that type, a bike that originally sold for under two hundred dollars! Best of all, there were photos and videos taken that clearly show our bike winning the whole thing! What are we going to do? Should we sponsor this guy? Should we buy ad space? Should we even verify that the email is true?

Well, if "we" were pretending to be Seattle Bike Supply, doing business under their brand name "Redline Bicycles", we would probably do anything but what Redline has done - that is, sit on the information and not breathe a word about it to anyone. Oh, yes - that is what they have done.

As reported earlier on the BMX Basics front page, Raul Ruiz Astorga, my friend and houseguest, won the World Championship Challenger Cruiser class on a Redline 444. For those of you who aren't aware of what a Redline 444 is, it is a tri-moly cruiser weighing a solid thirty pounds and retailing in most shops for around two hundred bucks, maybe less. With the exception of the hard-to-find Huffy Radius 24", it's probably the cheapest "race-ready" cruiser to be sold in the past five or six years.

I purchased two used RL444s from a BMX Basics reader last year, a 1998 and a 1999 model, for the princely sum of $200 - and I really thought, after looking at them in the cold light of day, that I had paid too much. Only my general sense of Redline-related nostalgia permitted me to justify the purchase. "I'll have some backup frames in case I break my PL-24," I told Mrs. Boswell, but truth be told I figured the bikes would spend the rest of their lives in my basement.

When Raul told me that he wanted to race Cruiser in the World Championships, I offered him the free use of either of my 444s, an offer I also made to Andres Barrios. Neither of the bikes had a functioning crankset, so Raul and Andres installed some used cranks, some new grips and brake pads, and they were ready to rock - on bikes that weighed half again what their competition would be riding and didn't have Super Box Stays, Monocoque Construction, Mono-Tubes, True Temper OX Platinum Tubing, or any of that other good stuff. I figured that Raul and Andres would use their Cruiser laps as warm-up laps for their "real" rides in 20" Challenger.

They both made the semis with little difficulty. Andres put a foot wrong in his semi and didn't make the cut to the main, but Raul sailed through, lined up for the main, and blew everyone else away to take the World Championship (for the NBL, anyway).

It took a couple of hours for the significance of Raul's win to sink into my mind. He had won the Worlds on an entry-level bike, a bike built in Taiwan at a raw cost of under a hundred dollars, a bike that most local-track 15 Cruiser riders wouldn't be caught dead on! Not since Shannon Williams won the ABA Grands on a steel Team Murray frame - that his father cut apart, added two inches to the top and down tubes, and welded back together - has there been such a Cinderella story in this sport. This was great news for Raul, and great news for the Bolivian team, and great news for his new sponsor, Kami Racing, but it was also great news for all of us out there in Average BMX Rider-Land. It conclusively demonstrated that my constant mantra here on this website, "Spend money on your riding, not on your bike," was correct. It was news that could put hope into the heart on every kid out there on a cheap bike.

I contacted Redline. I emailed BMX webmasters all over the world. And I sat back and waited for the news to be posted, for Redline to give Raul a new Proline in exchange for the World Champion RL444, for BMX Mania! to mention it... and I waited... and I waited... and heard nothing. This news, for better or for worse, would be blacked out.

I could understand why some of the BMX news outlets would ignore it - who cares what kind of bike somebody's riding? I knew the color mags would pretend it never happened - after all, they depend on ads, and nothing pays for ads better than selling $400 aluminum frames that cost $125 to make. But why would Redline ignore it?

Perhaps they ignored it because it simply didn't fit in with the industry worldview - that Winning Costs Money. To win, you need a $1500 bike with titanium washers and triple box stays. You need a personal trainer, a forty-five-week schedule, full factory support, and a brand-new neon racing outfit. The idea that a rider could come to America, play Nintendo 64 eight hours a day, ride around my house a little bit, and win the Worlds on a $200 bike was so far over their heads they had to pretend it didn't happen. The problem is, it did happen. Raul and Andres proved once again that anyone with the right talent and dedication can win it all. No factory support needed.

I'm not saying we should all go out and buy old Redline 444s. I let Raul and Andres keep the bikes, and I don't know where to find any more. What I'm saying is that BMX is about riders, not bikes. It's about heart, not factory box vans. It's about you, not the GT Bicycles Marketing Department. If you aren't winning, stop blaming the bike, your parents, the track operator, the phases of the moon - look inside and see what you need to do to win. Assuming, that is, that you really want to win. I've been very happy in BMX with nothing but local wins to my credit.

If you do want to win, though, what better way to do it that on a four-year-old, tri-moly, bargain-basement bike? Congratulations to Raul and Andres yet again for proving me right. I think it's the first time

Monday, 2 January 2012

Haro Pro-XL race bike

First and foremost, Singapore BMX would like to take this opportunity to wish one and all a very happy New Year 2012. We hope that this year will bring more to the BMX table here in Singapore and we also hope that more people in our esteemed Singapore Sports Council will stop referring to BMX as a kid's sport. In short, we hope that they understand that BMX is here to stay.

While on the subject of BMX, we have had many emails and letters asking us about what bike can be used for racing. Of course, they want the best bang for buck BMX racing bike. This Haro Pro-XL bike above has everything for the beginner...at a relatively inexpensive price. A description and brief details of the bike are:

Like the smaller sized models below it, our Pro is built using aircraft-grade 6061 aluminum and features a sealed Euro BB and hubs. The biggest difference between the smaller frames and this one are the 3D dropouts with integrated chain tensioners (found on our Pro and up). A 21” top tube and full size 8” bars make this a perfect fit for early-to-mid teens serious about winning a title or two.                      
  • + 6061 T-6 Alloy Frame with 3D Drop Outs & Chain Tensioners
  • + 100% chromoly fork
  • + 175mm 3-Piece Crmo Crank Set with Sealed BB
  • + 36 Spoke Alloy Rims with Alloy Hubs And Sealed Bearings
  • + Kenda “Kontact” Tires
  • + DX Style Alloy 9/16” Pedals

Pretty good componentry for a good price. If you are just getting started in racing, this would be a good bike to start on.

Friday, 30 December 2011

The Skyway cruiser

It was only a matter of time before Skyway started to make the rare 24" cruiser that was around in the 80s. This is is all new, with threadless forks, V-brake mounts and modern geometry. Made of 4130 chromoly, this is one sexy looking cruiser. Check out the website above for more details as this cruiser is a prototype. Skyway is back!

Thursday, 29 December 2011

Supercross chromoly race forks

I have always said that there is an alternative to the fail-without-warning carbon-fibre forks that are so prevalent on BMX race bikes nowadays. Another one worth looking at are these Supercross BMX SLT forks. Unlike carbon fibre, these are made of chromoly so they will not snap without warning and are lighter than an equivalent carbon-fibre fork. I do not have a race BMX anymore but when I did, I was running the Odyssey Thermal 41 race forks that were strong as anything. If I had a race bike, I would get these.

Sunday, 25 December 2011

Merry Christmas from Singapore BMX

We at Singapore BMX would like to wish one and all a very Merry Christmas and all the very best for the New Year 2012. Ride safe always!

Friday, 16 December 2011

Elevn Technologies chromoly BMX race forks

Forget about what you have heard about carbon-fibre forks being the lightest. There are chromoly forks out there which are lighter and more resilient than carbon fibre forks. Take Elevn Technologies for example. I have heard that it is the same people that make the Supercross BMX chromoly forks that make these forks. Supercross forks are another one that I will gladly recommend. So get these forks for piece of mind.

Wednesday, 14 December 2011

PK Ripper heaven


Came across this web-site the other day and I must say that the person who started it has almost everything there is to be about the Perry Kramer Ripper or better known as the PK Ripper. It has a a very apt name too, PK Ripper Heaven. Check out the website if you want to know all about the bike that changed the whole BMX industry.

Friday, 2 December 2011

Broken DK frame


Someone called my attention to this video because he knew that I used to ride a DK BMX bike in the past. Looks like this DK bike broke into three pieces at a racetrack in Australia. All I can say is: holy crap! I think back to the days when Robbie Miranda jumped ten cars on a DK Legend (the very same bike I used) and the frame was intact. DK seriously needs to look at this as it seems to be some kind of manufacturing defect