A Visit to Handspun’s Facilities

A Handspun wheelbuilder, Mark B, checks the tension

Recently, I was lucky enough to take a trip to visit one of Pavé’s supporters, Handspun. Handspun is an expert wheelbuilding service that’s a spin-off of one of North America’s major distributors, Quality Bicycle Products. QBP lives in a big warehouse complex outside of Minneapolis, Minnesota – a short ride on a day off for me. I went to meet with David Cory, Handspun’s Brand Manager, who was eager to show me around.

As I described in the Rest Day Review, I’ve been riding wheels generously provided by Handspun, and I wanted to see the operation behind it – as well as the operation behind the stock of just about every bike shop I’ve ever been in to (I remember being a young one just out of college, working at my first bike shop, drooling as I paged through the QBP catalogue on slow afternoons). And so, at the place where it all happens, David took me around the offices and warehouses, pointing out many things for me to drool over.

I wouldn't mind this on my wall of my workplace, either.

At their wheelbuilding facility, I got a glimpse of what they do. All Handspun wheels get hands-on attention; initially, some are hand-assembled and some are machine-assembled, but after assembly, each one is  hand-tensioned and hand-trued. Each builder uses a frequently-calibrated, industry-top DTSwiss Tensio (wielded in the top picture). With 16 people building over 1100 wheels a week – do the math – they’re some of the best, most experienced in the business. Add to that the fact that they’re seated on top of one of the biggest stockpiles of gear in the continent, and they can deliver custom wheels to dealers, spec’ed to customer’s desires, faster than fast. It was very cool to see this comparatively small corner of the warehouse and imagine the amount of wheels that would pass through to wind up underneath the bikes of people all over the world.

"Spokes? We got 'em."

Handspun is heavily into wide rims, offering a full line of HED Belgiums, with various customization available. I asked David why they’d devoted a big chunk of their product line to wide rims. “Because I rode them,” he said, “And the benefits are obvious. Better feel and better handling without added weight? Absolutely.”

Each wheel's tag is signed by the builder.

So, I asked David: Who rides Handspuns? “Everybody,” he said, and touted the depth and variation in their line. They can be a racer’s go-to bread-and-butter all purpose racing and training wheels (they’re already mine), and they can build wheels tweaked for high performance in cyclocross, touring, casual and recreational riding – whatever. After all, they’ve got the parts – they’re right there in the warehouse.

“So how do you want me to review your wheels?” I asked David. “Ride them as they’re intended,” David replied. “Put them through their paces. It’ll be obvious how good they are.” I told him about my plans for training, for gravel-road riding, for touring, for racing criteriums, for riding singletrack on my cross bike, and for racing cyclcross. “Good,” he said. “A good set of wheels should last you through all that stuff.”

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The Sticky Bidon – August 9, 2011

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, August 9, 2011

Seen any cool links we missed? Share ’em in the comments below!

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Thor Hushovd to BMC – My (Quick) Two Cents

Fotoreporter Sirotti

 

It has just been announced that Thor Hushovd has signed with BMC for the next three years, an interesting move that has several possible implications. Here are two quick thoughts:

1. How does Thor’s signing affect BMC’s long-rumored acquisition of Philippe Gilbert? While not as expensive as Gilbert, Thor likely didn’t come cheap; one has to wonder if there’s money left to sign the Belgian superstar as well. And while Thor and Phil’s goals are largely mutually exclusive (with one or two key exceptions including the Ronde van Vlaanderen) might their egos clash? And how does Cuddles feel about all this notoriety taking away some of his spotlight? Super teams work only if there’s chemistry among the stars–which leads me to my next point:

2. Perhaps most interesting was this quote from today’s VeloNews story:

“It’s a serious team where it looks like everything is well-organized,” Hushovd said of BMC Racing. “There’s a plan put together for the riders for all the big and important races. Everyone knows what to do. That’s a good thing.”

Read between the lines to decipher a clear criticism of Garmin-Cervelo a team in which Hushovd was clearly frustrated by the lack of a clear and consistent managerial leader (in the car and at the races, that is). With Thor gone, Heinrich Haussler rumored to be exiting, and the lack of a new title sponsor to replace Cervelo, is trouble afoot for Jonathan Vaughters?

That’s my (quick) two cents–what’s yours?

 

 

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The Sticky Bidon – August 8, 2011

2010 Tour de France - Jurgen Van den Broeck

Fotoreporter Sirotti

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, August 8, 2011

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Monday Musette – HTC-HighRoad Edition

Fotoreporter Sirotti

 

Like everyone, I’ve had a lot going through my mind as the dust settles on the dissolution of HTC-HighRoad. Here’s my best attempt at putting them to words:

1. Bob Stapleton was brought in to rescue T-Mobile, who was being suffocated by drug allegations, lack of identity, and a withdrawing sponsor. The 2007 positive of Patrick Sinkewitz was especially painful, coming just as new management took over. With the money that T-Mobile paid up-front, the following year they were self-sponsored so to speak, as T-Mobile didn’t want their image on the team anymore. Further development saw the team shed their German identity and become a US-based team. The team decided to take the High Road, perhaps in reference to the dirty practices in cycling. The team’s dissolution seems to be a smack in the face to all who have tried to do things the “right” way. It boggles the mind why men with much darker pasts continue to find sponsorship for their squads while men like Stapleton are left on the outside looking in.

2. Since the beginning, the pillar of the men’s team success was Mark Cavendish. They invested early and consistently in him as the team had (at the time) no (top-tier) GC contenders or classics contenders–grand tour stage wins were an easy way for the team to gain exposure and credibility. And despite growing success in “other” races, the Tour is still where most non-Continental sponsors crave victories. If the rumors were indeed true, HTC was understandably insistent on the team keeping Cav as a condition for sponsorship. Peter Velits might have finished third in last year’s Vuelta, Matthew Goss might have won Milan-San Remo, and John Degenkolb may be the fastest young sprinter in the sport, but they’re hardly enough to build a team’s finances around.

Which begs the question…

3. Has HTC been winning the “wrong” races? HTC is the world’s top-ranked team, with a staggering 484 wins–what have they been doing wrong? How is that kind of success not marketable? And what does it say of a point system that is that’s meant to recognize such dominance? So many questions to which we’re likely never to get answers.

4. But there’s a bigger question here: if HTC doesn’t feel that supporting the sport’s most successful team valuable, are we to assume that cycling’s sponsorship value is less than in other sports? If so, should cycling’s sponsorship model change? Perhaps to one that supports revenue-sharing?

5. As for Cav, we have to wonder if his next step will be a smart move. He seems to be in it for the for money, since just about everything he could want (leadership, teammates, coaches, staff, control of his image) was available at HTC. Maybe he’s enamored with the idea of being the best British rider on the world’s best British team? Where is he going?

6. As for the rest of the team and staff, it will be interesting to see where the chips fall. With only one truly “new” program on the horizon, it’s likely that many people will find themselves without jobs in 2012–or at least not the jobs they were used to having at HTC. The first week of the transfer period has been surprisingly quiet, now that the chips have fallen at HTC, expect things to heat-up quickly. Tom Boonen’s pre-Tour signing in beginning to look like a wise move.

7. And last but not least, what does the future hold for Bob Stapleton? It’s hard to keep a good man down–he’s hoping to keep the women’s team alive; might a year off give him the time he needs to come back for more in 2013?

What are your thoughts on the demise of HTC? Share your comments below.

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The Sticky Bidon – August 5, 2011

Interesting cycling items from across the Internet, August 5, 2011

Seen any cool links we missed? Share ’em in the comments below!

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