Chapman makes stunningly beautiful bikes, would love to see yours!!!
Which colors does it have?

On Monday, July 7, 2025 at 4:48:49 PM UTC-7 philip....@gmail.com wrote:

> Photos or it didn’t happen Ted!
>
> Although I’m assuming this is the lovely blue one that’s been doing the 
> rounds on Instagram the past few days?
>
> P. W.
> ~
> (917) 514-2207
> ~
>
>
>
>
> On Jul 7, 2025, at 4:18 PM, Ted Durant <tedd...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I don't want to clog another thread with info about my new bike by Brian 
> Chapman, so I'm starting a new thread for it. Hope people don't mind that, 
> and that it's not a real RBW topic.
>
>
> It's RBW adjacent, I think, though. Beautiful lugged steel frames on plush 
> 650B tires were headed for obscurity, but for the efforts of Grant Petersen 
> and Jan Heine (who was very influenced by Grant) and some dedicated and 
> talented builders. I also have to give a shout-out to Kirk Pacenti, whose 
> Pari-Moto tires were a revelation, and whose fork crown and the Columbus 
> fork blades he designed grace my new bike. We live in an embarrassment of 
> riches when it comes to 650B tires, a stark contrast to when Grant took a 
> giant risk and had some bikes built using that wheel size. I wish I could 
> say the same for rims, but thank goodness for the good people at Velocity.
>
> I grew up riding about 100 kilometers from where Brian's home/workshop is, 
> south of Providence, RI. I am very fond of Rhode Island and have many great 
> memories from there. Brian's work speaks for itself. If you haven't seen 
> his Flickr site, I highly encourage you to spend some time there. It is 
> awesome to see his progress as a builder (and as a photographer of his 
> work). My first request for a bike from him was rejected as "not in his 
> swing zone." If you look through his work, you pretty quickly realize how 
> wide his swing zone is, but I was asking for something that would have 
> required a lot of effort on his part. It worked out for the best, though, 
> as the bike that resulted from that process, while being what I asked for, 
> in the inimitable words of Grant, wasn't what I wanted.
>
> My second request of Brian, which came following his restoration of a 
> beautiful Raleigh, was that he do a similar restoration of my Fuji America. 
> That bike hit a car, though, and while the frame wasn't visibly bent, the 
> cracks in the paint made him understandably nervous about working on it. 
> So, instead, he agreed to put me on the list to build a bike that is 
> somewhat inspired by the Fuji, and two years later he nailed the brief and 
> ever so much more so. Fuji advertised the America as "the ultimate touring 
> bike". Brian raised that bar considerably.
>
> The bike is something of a "greatest hits collection" of all my favorite 
> stuff from 50 years of building up bikes and riding them. Reynolds 753 
> frame tubes, Columbus fork blades, SunTour rear dropouts, Campagnolo brake 
> levers (in carbon, no less), Shimano Dura Ace detailers and 9-speed bar end 
> shifters, Sugino self-extracting crank bolts, Nitto handlebars and seat 
> post. 
>
> The setup is unapologetically exactly the same as my other bikes. I've 
> dialed in a position that works for me in my current state and this is not 
> the bike for exploring something else.
>
> The ride is sublime and honestly unlike anything else that I've ridden. 
> The closest to it, in theory, is my Terraferma Corsa 650B. The steering 
> geometry, though, is a slacker head angle and a bit more trail. Where it 
> trounces the Terraferma (don't get me wrong, the Terraferma is a good 
> bike....) is 1) despite using skinny, thin wall tubing, it doesn't feel 
> like a noodle; and 2) the steering is the most intuitive and secure of any 
> bike I've ridden. There's definitely a sense of liveliness, which I can 
> feel as a slight sideways movement of the lower part of the bike, but that 
> immediately translates into the sensation of it pushing the bike forward. I 
> can only surmise it's what the rowers call "swing".  Extra light tires and 
> latex tubes (from Grand Bois)  surely contribute to the smoothness of the 
> ride.
>
> Ted Durant
> Milwaukee WI USA
>
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