Yo planning on making a road fixie out of secondhand parts, however my mind is boggled for choice! i am also finding it difficult to decide between performance and style as i already have a performance bike and my creative juices are flowing! might just go for a blend of the two but no ideas what frame and components would lend itself to this set up :S i do want this bike to be fast and light, i prefer bullhorns and a flipflop hub, but dont want to compromise overall style (this is probably the general aim to fixies right?)
feeedback would be a gud un
I faced these very qustions 18 months ago. I may not have done the smart thing, but this is what worked for me:
1. Steel frame (butted 531 that I had hanging from a rafter). Go cheap if you already have performance wheels.
2. Bull horns are fine if you like them. I cut down some droips to make mine - I half love them, half regret doing so...
3. Wheels. Anything lightish and round. You will be riding fixed for a billion reasons, but are unlikely to be doing so for a best-ever time. I'd be inclined to keep it cheap and just enjoy the bizarre ride you get from fixed.
As to what lends itself to fixed, whatever you want is what you want. I don't think there are any rules.
Costs mount if you're not strict with yourself, so keep an eye on that.
I agree with whoever said that Steel is lovely. It is. I'd go for an old, secondhand steel frame with horizontal dropouts.
You will wonder (at some stage) whether to fit rear brakes or not. Initially I removed mine. I just wanted to throw out as much as I could...
After a couple of scares I re-fitted them. I don't know if I'll ever have the courage to ride without them.
Everyone is different, but I wouldn't give yourself the flip-flop option. I have free-wheel on other bikes. The fixie is just utterly different and slightly mentally unbalanced. I think the purity adds to the madness of it all.
I know others think differently and are probably wiser and cleverer than me.... Mine was good for a 125-mile charity ride (no big hills).
The wonderful thing about building your own bike is that if you want a fixed-gear full-suss MTB with dropped bars, hydraulic discs and 700c road wheels, you can have it...
But don't! That would just be silly.