Hello I'm Mark and I'm a cycloholic and now appear to be a ebikeoholic I put some of the blame on you lot.
Bikes have been an addiction of mine for last 18 years since I went on holiday to Skipton and took my £99 Apollo All Terrain Bike (as they marketed it at the time). The bike was horrendous as expected, but the mountain biking, wow, I was a one hit addict.
I was late into cycling, at the relatively old age of 31. I used to love bikes as a kid, but ditched them in favour of a powered 2 wheeler as a 16 year old and then into 4 wheels from then on. I'm still a total petrol head, but that's a different story.
I've built and modified numerous mountain bikes over the years and commuted occasionally when I could, but working in construction has limited this due to the location of the sites I've in which I've been involved. Having changed role 3 years ago and now spend 2 or 3 days in the office, which is only 12 miles from home (there is a shorter direct route, but this has very busy roads), I toyed with the idea of cycling for ages, put off by lack of showers and a very heavy bag I need to carry in and home when I'm not in the office 2 days in a row.
I then saw an GTech advert and bought one in March this year. I love singlespeeds and commuted for about a year on one, so and I liked the idea, plus it sounded great as it had a belt drive.
IMG_20170422_171538 by fatwomble, on Flickr
The bike was actually very good, but like most addicts, it wasn't enough, I fancied building my own and bought the cheapest kit from Panda who had an offer, so £380 with the battery.
I already had a spare mountain bike, so I put the kit on my Stooge Frame
The idea was that I would use it more off road than on.
IMG_20170423_101414 by fatwomble, on Flickr
Soon however, I found that I preferred this bike to the GTech (saved 5 to 10 minutes on my commute) and have been commuting on it since May, ditching the knobblies and adding a rack and a better front mudguard.
I bought a second battery for longer rides.
Now I have lots of bike spares in the bike shed, enough to build another bike, with a few additional purchases, so I again found myself buying another kit, this time an elifeshop one which was good value (assuming it lasts). I have a spare battery holder, so I can swap batteries between bikes, but which frame to use?
In the end I went for my old On-One Inbred 29er singlespeed, to which I fitted a mech hanger. Other than the cassette and chain, I only needed a set of hydraulic brakes to add to the parts I already had. I found a bargain set for £65 (only Clarkes, but they feel fine).
Finished it yesterday evening, final fettling and test run today.
IMG_20171202_154149 by fatwomble, on Flickr
Clearly I'm not in the same class as D8veh, but with this forum to feed my addiction, I can see more bike builds in the future.
Bikes have been an addiction of mine for last 18 years since I went on holiday to Skipton and took my £99 Apollo All Terrain Bike (as they marketed it at the time). The bike was horrendous as expected, but the mountain biking, wow, I was a one hit addict.
I was late into cycling, at the relatively old age of 31. I used to love bikes as a kid, but ditched them in favour of a powered 2 wheeler as a 16 year old and then into 4 wheels from then on. I'm still a total petrol head, but that's a different story.
I've built and modified numerous mountain bikes over the years and commuted occasionally when I could, but working in construction has limited this due to the location of the sites I've in which I've been involved. Having changed role 3 years ago and now spend 2 or 3 days in the office, which is only 12 miles from home (there is a shorter direct route, but this has very busy roads), I toyed with the idea of cycling for ages, put off by lack of showers and a very heavy bag I need to carry in and home when I'm not in the office 2 days in a row.
I then saw an GTech advert and bought one in March this year. I love singlespeeds and commuted for about a year on one, so and I liked the idea, plus it sounded great as it had a belt drive.

The bike was actually very good, but like most addicts, it wasn't enough, I fancied building my own and bought the cheapest kit from Panda who had an offer, so £380 with the battery.
I already had a spare mountain bike, so I put the kit on my Stooge Frame
The idea was that I would use it more off road than on.

Soon however, I found that I preferred this bike to the GTech (saved 5 to 10 minutes on my commute) and have been commuting on it since May, ditching the knobblies and adding a rack and a better front mudguard.
I bought a second battery for longer rides.
Now I have lots of bike spares in the bike shed, enough to build another bike, with a few additional purchases, so I again found myself buying another kit, this time an elifeshop one which was good value (assuming it lasts). I have a spare battery holder, so I can swap batteries between bikes, but which frame to use?
In the end I went for my old On-One Inbred 29er singlespeed, to which I fitted a mech hanger. Other than the cassette and chain, I only needed a set of hydraulic brakes to add to the parts I already had. I found a bargain set for £65 (only Clarkes, but they feel fine).
Finished it yesterday evening, final fettling and test run today.

Clearly I'm not in the same class as D8veh, but with this forum to feed my addiction, I can see more bike builds in the future.
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