ON A CHILLY SPRING AFTERNOON, Rob Vandermark, the founder and president of Watertown, Massachusetts-based Seven Cycles, settles into his office. He opens a manila folder on his desk, which is also home to a couple of BlackBerrys and a business-management tome called The Fifth Discipline. Adjusting the glasses on his pale face, Vandermark studies some figure-filled paperwork, as if he were a nerdy researcher and not, in fact, the driving force behind one of the world's top custom-bike companies.
Truth is, he's both.
| Seven Secrets |
1.Carbon-Fiber Tubing:
The company prefers
filament-wound carbon fiber—computer-machined and thus more consistently and better built.
2.Lug:
Check out the welds—done by hand, and super-smooth, consistent, and strong. The lug—the joint where the tubes meet—is custom-built for each buyer.
3.Top-Tube Angle:
Bike builders tweak the slope to dial in a rider's comfort—or simply to fit his aesthetic sensibility.
4.Titanium Stem:
Don't forget the $400 hood ornament: A custom titanium stem can be built to any length or angle.
5.Fork Dropouts:
Seven chooses among 12 different sets of dropouts—angled fittings that hold the front wheel—for
optimal handling.
6.Titanium Downtube:
Tube walls get precision-shaved to minimize weight while maintaining strength; one pipe can be shaved to as many as six thicknesses.
7.Bottom Bracket:
Want a smooth ride? Seven can prioritize qualities like comfort, acceleration, and handling.
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The folder contains a profile of one of Seven's newest customers: a 56-year-old road rider who's dissatisfied with his current, pedigreed Italian bicycle. He's come to Vandermark hoping that Seven can work its magic and outfit him with two-wheel sublimity.
"There's hand numbness and upper-back pain," says Vandermark, 40, in a deep, measured voice. "Subjectively, I'd say make him a little more upright, a little more comfortable." Then he chooses one of a dozen black binders resting on a bookshelf and flips it open to a document titled "Theory Behind Seven System for Determining Differential."
"Now," he adds, "how do we objectify this guy's needs into math?"
Binders? Differential? Math? Exactly what kind of machine comes out of this place?
VANDERMARK AND his 40-person company don't build bicycles so much as craft precision instruments. Unlike most of the bikes manufactured by fabled boutique brands like Moots and Serotta, virtually every Seven is custom-built. Choosing among the company's 30-plus road, mountain, cyclocross, and touring frames—nearly all of which come in high-end materials like titanium and carbon fiber—only kicks off a painstaking process. Two months after a customer orders his bike from an authorized Seven dealer, the finished product gets shipped from the company's headquarters to the local shop, where wheels and components are installed. Average final price tag: $8,000.
"The people at Seven are perfectionists, and that's not even a good enough word," says Ashley Korenblat, who worked with Vandermark at the high-end-bike maker Merlin and is now president of Western Spirit, a Moab, Utah–based bike-touring company. "Think obsessed, but with no
negative connotations."
Owners of Seven bikes, meanwhile,
often sound like they've found God, and he's apparently made of titanium. "After long rides, I used to have back problems. But with my Seven, it's like I'm not even
riding," says Brad Yoder, a 45-year-old
computer programmer and triathlete from Charlottesville, Virginia. "It's as comfortable as a lounge chair."
Vandermark's preoccupation with building custom bikes began in the early 1990s. As an amateur racer and formally trained sculptor, he believed there was potential in providing discriminating cyclists with a tailored bike that was also a piece of art. "I realized that it was easy to design a bike that was really neat and rode well," Vandermark told me. "But could I really make one?"
Vandermark didn't want to live the life of the typical frame-building artisan, who gets sucked into the romance of fabricating elegant machinery and then suffers the hand-to-mouth reality of being a one-man show. So he obsessed over production processes, reading books on how companies like Toyota streamlined their manufacturing. In 1997, when Vandermark launched his company—which was named for the lucky number seven—he codified fit and construction methods that employees could learn. While many boutique frame builders will notch measly double-digit production runs, Vandermark's $5 million company expects to produce 2,700 custom frames this year.
The odyssey of buying a Seven starts by plunging into a 12-page order form. Among its 108 questions, the workbook asks for multiple body measurements, whether you're a "gear masher" or a "spinner," and how you would rate your current bike's "drivetrain rigidity." Once the form is complete, a fit specialist conducts an extensive pre-production, fork-to-finish phone interview—a process applied to all customers, whether they're from North America or Australia. The data is plugged into Seven's sizing database, which generates a spreadsheet that will correspond with a frame design. Then Vandermark steps in, making sure, for instance, that they've specified frame tubes appropriate for a five-foot-eight, 130-pound male triathlete, which could be very different from the tubes that go into a frame for a five-foot-eight, 130-pound male touring cyclist. "Every detail has an effect," says Vandermark. "If we designed a bike for a man and then realized it's really for a woman? We'd have to start from scratch."
The final touches complete, the order goes back to the customer for approval. A computer then turns the data into a frame blueprint, which is sent to the Seven folks responsible for converting the paper bike into a lusty ride.