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R-Werks EVOO pre order

the lines of this bike really feel right to me. maybe you too. likely if you are reading this we have some things in common.

—– Scroll down to the bottom of the page if you aren’t interested in my anecdotes and just want the FACTS! (geo etc) —–

It’s been several decades since I have been excited about a new mountain bike. It was all I’d think about as a teenager — my identity to a large extent. new tech mountain bike guy/kid. I had to have the newest and lightest stuff — often times wedging the Mountain Bike Action into the binder of my school books during class. I was learning the real knowledge!

I worked at a shop in between my weekend fishing job so that I could employee purchase and then flip bikes after a season on mtbr.com. I was on top of the world!

1997 its not a bra brah!

this was a strange era between steel and carbon — and it did not last long with how quickly the planned perceived obsolescence virus was inoculating itself into just about every consumer good. I followed the tech crumbs all the way until 2001 when a crash on a fashionable free ride hardtail spiral fractured my humerus. after an 8 month recovery on a recumbent with my arm (more of an atrophied chicken wing) in a sling, my perception of mountain biking changed dramatically.

2001 faux north shore Guilford CT

I was only 21 (actually), and after 8 months outa the saddle, I knew more than ever that I didn’t want that to happen again. i wanted to ride mountain bikes for as long as my body would let me, and I knew that if I kept hucking my uncoordinated self like the bike industry wanted me to do, then I would probably spiral fracture my other arm and not be able to wipe. blame it on the industry!

my new/old approach to off-road riding became physical form in thee form of a rigid 26″ mountain bike. spent the remaining 3 years of college riding rigid, and impressing people by simply just keeping up with my suspension friends. it was challenging, but possible — but most importantly it was low stakes challenging. I could navigate techy climbs and descents, but never felt out of my comfort zone. more importantly, the simplicity of the machine I was astride, really began to resonate with me and my riding style. I became a trail scholar — reading the trail like only a rigid rider can/needs to. you don’t roll/slam over things, you find ways around them. it’s fun and intentional!

I caved and got a bomber z2 fork around college graduation and then moved back to the east coast. in 2006, I got my first 29er … a Gary Fisher Rig. it was rigid, aluminum, and purple. a rare production 29er with rim brakes. still have it! I remember being in awe my first ride “wow this thing rides better than my 26 inch front sus!”. the big wheels did a lot of work on the trail, made me not miss my complicated front end at all.

around this time things in mountain biking really began to evolve for some and devolve for others. I disassociated, instead feeling more drawn to the euro roadie aesthetic where bikes still looked like bikes and remained largely uncomplicated pre aero era. this is when I turned my back on mountain biking — it had become a different sport.

about 8 years ago one of my high school friends who’d kept up with the times started talking about new school MTB geo. basically a longer front end via longer TT and slacker HT with a steeper ST for better climbing. I built a bike like that and used it for touring. was actually the first ronsbikes bike offering — the Warthog Wash Wiper. a pretty extreme bike for reasons other than the geo, but including the geo also. well I liked it, and now those geo numbers are pretty basic for modern mountain bikes these days.

photo the radavist

relatively short chain stays, 75 ST, 65 HT. this thing held a line! but it was by no means a nimble XC machine. I loved hacking the rigid platform though — the geo gave me a taste for how you can manipulate the useful modernity of a bike, without complicating it with the trappings generally associated with progressive design. but this is a touring bike, and I don’t do much of that these days.

fast forward to the ALUMALITH I did with Crust and Frank the Welder. a popular bike. I so popular that I vacillated on whether or not I should just make another run of them without changing anything. but I wanted more out of it. I wanted to make something more contemporary and lighter. I also wanted it to be a 29er (the alumaltih is 27.5″). it still needed to work with all the different handlebar combos — drop, flat, and sweptback.

this is a size large. I am 6’2″ with a 30″ (77cm) saddle height

enter the EVOO. smooth, aromatic, vegetal….with a spicy aftertaste. extra virgin. this build above weighs 22lbs without any sort of carbon. its shockingly light, and concept proven on both east and west coast trails. you will keep up with your friends and look a lot cooler doing it. okay specs!

SPECS AND GEO

Frame: Dedacciai 7005 Aluminum (about 1800g)

Fork: Columbus steel “taper traxxx” (about 900g)

Made by: Frank the Welder in Bellows Falls VT

Clearance: 700×45-29×2.4 tires

Stealth Dropper Routing: not pictured, but yes

Seat post size: 27.2

F Der clamp: 31.8-32

Seatpost collar size: 31.8-32

BB shell: 73 English

1x compatible: yes

Spacing: 135 rear, 100 front. QR

Finishes: buffed aluminum with silver fork, or red powder ($200 upcharge)

ETA: NOW!

Custom Ron’s builds available: yes, for around 5k total including frame/fork (email me)

BB drop: 60

okay, hopefully that is enough to make an informed decision! feel free to email me ronnie@ronsbikes.com with any questions.

PRE ORDER OPEN UNTIL NOVEMBER 10th.

ORDER HERE AT RONS BIKES DOT COM

XO RR

12 responses to “R-Werks EVOO pre order”

  1.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    This EVOO frame (and especially the build with red bits) makes my heart go pitter patter.

    Currently daydreaming about building this up with the Vivo, which is also on preorder and ships in February 2025.

    Thanks for the great write up and video overview. If nothing else, this has been a much welcome distraction going into election week.

    Liked by 1 person

  2.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Hello from Old England! Been enjoying your bucolic attitude to life and bikes for some years – and am mightily tempted by your R-Werx. Would work very well in the County of Norfolk with many small lanes, tracks and not many hills. Any idea on how much getting one across the Atlantic is? Postage looked very reasonable when I spoofed the purchase of your last Aluminax, the tax calculation looked correct but the duty was wayyyy off (should be 4% of total price inc postage). Many thanks. Jo

    Like

    1. coolultraromance1598 Avatar

      hello there over in olde england! the shipping price would likely be around $200 and then the VAT and customs etc. looking closer to $400 I’d wager sadly.

      Like

  3. wizard culture Avatar

    Being a trail scholar is the best! Thanks for sharing!

    Like

  4.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Just wondering… Where did the Warthog end up? It’s among my top three bikes of all times.

    Cheers man,

    Volker

    Like

    1. coolultraromance1598 Avatar

      ive got it in pieces in the barn — not much use for it anymore if you are interested!

      Like

  5.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    It’s giving Cannondale M800 Beast of the East. Perhaps some inspiration?

    Also, like others here I enjoyed the narrative about finding joy in rigid bikes. My journey to that same conclusion has been different, but having been injured a lot (skateboarding) changed the way I view activities with lots of risk involved. I feel like people rarely talk about risk with “full sus” bikes. No shame to people or whatever, but people are always talking about how comfortable those bikes are on trails, and never talk about how they encourage a riding style that’s correlated to full face helmets and elbow pads – again no shame. But my point is that most people are not sponsored by redbull – and yet riding rigid on trails is still strange to most people. That is strange to me. Sorry for blabbering – just appreciated your post. Thanks again.

    -Chris (Seattle) ((grew up in CT))

    Like

  6. Peter Avatar
    Peter

    Damn thats a fine lookin bike there Ronnie! Thanks for sharing your personal MTB history too. That Warthog is stellar. My idea of what a bike should look like.

    Rubber side down,

    Peter

    Like

  7.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Wow! I also had a spiral fracture of my humerus in my early 20s. What a mess!!! Never healed properly and a few years later (after beating it to hell riding fixed all over NYC) I had to have it redone with some fancy titanium bits. Not an injury I recommend.

    Like

  8.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    let’s goooo!

    Like

  9. watson Avatar

    What a cool bike and great read, bud. That Warthog shoot is one of my favs!

    Like

  10. mellowruinsed5321562f Avatar
    mellowruinsed5321562f

    Benedict,

    damn i love these newsletters – making my procrastination a real treat.
    Thanks for sharing your MTB story (hope there will be the HC story following soon, haha). So nice to see that your path into Off-Road riding is pretty mucho the same.
    The EVOO makes me tinkering hard – gotta dig out these boxes of parts out of our barn and sell that shit on EBay to make some fundings ! So many Cervelllloo spare parts… Hell.

    Have a great rest of your week !

    Ciao Alessandro

    Like

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