FWIW:

My LBS can order the Sturmey Archer two speed hubs from QBP.

I'm going to build it with a Mavic Open Sport rim to match the
existing Quickbeam rims.

The cogs, $3 each...certainly the cheapest part of this project. :-)

It will be interesting to see how well this works.

Angus

On Nov 23, 6:13 am, Angus <angusle...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> This sounds like a very good option.
>
> I've only found one place in the US selling the S2C (coaster brake).
> I'll try my LBS as I don't really want the coaster brake.
>
> Anyone else know where to get these?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Angus
>
> On Nov 21, 9:50 am, "Thomas Lynn Skean" <thomaslynnsk...@comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi, all!
>
> > Does anyone have any experience with the sorta new Sturmey-Archer duomatic 
> > hub? If so... Are they of reasonable quality (as opposed to being a novelty 
> > or a fashion-gimmick or something intended for a department-store  bike)? 
> > If you have no experience but would venture an opinion, would you *expect* 
> > them to be of reasonable quality? (I know nothing about the modern 
> > Sturmey-Archer company or about low-gear-count IGHs at all.)
>
> > Could you imagine one on a Quickbeam/SimpleOne?
>
> > I like the idea of a singlespeed bike. But I expect that with my weight 
> > (~240ish) and given that I have already flirted with slight knee pain, 
> > riding a singlespeed bike very much would not be my favorite thing (or the 
> > smartest thing) to do. Over time, I expect that launches would challenge my 
> > knees with any gearing that I could contemplate cruising in. I understand 
> > that the SimpleOne is designed to be more than just a singlespeed. But I 
> > know me; I really can't see me hopping off the bike and moving the rear 
> > wheel whenever I needed to exploit that fact.
>
> > However, I've done some gearing arithmetic and have concluded that I might 
> > be happy with the two-speed duomatic hub. I could imagine launching in 
> > "low" (somewhat carefully) and then cruising in "high" (somewhat 
> > spinningly). But the "carefully" and "Spinningly" parts would be generally 
> > "good things to do" sometimes anyway. And, though I am in now way tired of 
> > biking the way I do now, I am on the lookout for ways to "mix it up" so as 
> > to keep riding as long as possible (think numbers of years, not distance 
> > per ride). I'm thinking the duomatic might even prove a "gateway hub" to 
> > actual singlespeed riding (theory being that if I keep riding in general, 
> > and sometimes a two-speed in particular, I'll continue to get healthier and 
> > become less vulnerable to knee pain as a result). I'm not remotely 
> > considering doing away with multi-speed riding (why would I leave my home 
> > in Hillborne heaven?).
>
> > I've had uniformly bad experiences with multi-speed IGHs in the past (7- 
> > and 8-speed Shimanos of 5+ years ago). But I'm open to the idea that, with 
> > the duomatic being a two-speed and with IGHs having perhaps improved as 
> > they've become more popular in the mainstream since then, it might not give 
> > me problems like those hubs of yore.
>
> > Any thoughts?
>
> > Yours,
> > Thomas Lynn Skean
> > P.S.
> > One possibility I'm considering is a completely cable-less SimpleOne with 
> > the coaster-brake version of the duomatic. That's the way I often rode 
> > bikes growing up; one rear brake, one rear gear. Though there'd be 
> > complexity hidden in the hub, the rest of the bike would be as simple as it 
> > gets.

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