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Soma Fabrications
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 8 พ.ย. 2013
Obviously Nitto's The Absolute Best. But Why Is That?
In this brand spotlight, Luke shares his thoughts on Nitto, why it's the best stem and handlebar maker around today, and some behind-the-scenes footage from the factory. Also be sure to listen for some interesting historical facts about Nitto.
มุมมอง: 2 681
วีดีโอ
Soma Rufus Mini Velo Ride Impressions
มุมมอง 4.2K14 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา
The Soma Rufus is a "mini velo" frameset designed for 20" BMX tires up to 2.3" Available in the US and soon elsewhere. Custom spec it yourself (or with your bike shop) with whatever bars or gearing suits you. Disclosure: This bike review is by someone who works at the company, but is giving his honest assessment after riding for a few months. Frame is a size SM. Reviewer is about 5' 6". ミニベロ Mo...
Is This a Component Manufacturer Better Than Shimano or SRAM?
มุมมอง 2.5K14 วันที่ผ่านมา
In this week's video, Luke chats about S-Ride, it's beginnings, some product highlights, and shares some behind-the-scenes footage of some of the manufacturing process. If you want more information about S-Ride, be sure to head here: shorturl.at/N5PP7
What Makes MKS Pedals So Special?
มุมมอง 3.7K28 วันที่ผ่านมา
Using some behind-the-scenes footage from a past visit to MKS, Luke explains why MKS is so special and why he loves using their pedals over pedals from anyone else. Also, full credit to the wonderful La Chouette in Paris for the photo used for the thumbnail. Interested in learning more about them? Click here to see what we carry from MKS: shorturl.at/2Czla
Bar Tape That's Better Than Anything Else?
มุมมอง 623หลายเดือนก่อน
Luke, our warehouse manager, chats about why he likes Newbaum's so much and why it's worth checking out. He also gives a little bit of history about Newbaum's! Check out the full range of Newbaum's here: www.somafabshop.com/shop/category/brands-newbaum-s-152
Is This the Best Bottom Bracket Currently Available?
มุมมอง 2.8Kหลายเดือนก่อน
Luke covers some details about the ScramJet bottom bracket made by Tange for IRD. Why is it so good? How does it work? That and more answered in this video!
Why Is the Mini Velo a Superior Choice?
มุมมอง 6Kหลายเดือนก่อน
In this video, Luke, our warehouse manager, talks about the Rufus, our latest mini velo. We're not new to the mini velo game and we think our experience really shows in the refinements made to this particular model.
EVT Field Unit Demo at MADE Show 2024
มุมมอง 2582 หลายเดือนก่อน
Brett Flemming of Efficient Velo Tools demonstrates the features of the most heavy duty portable repair stand available, the FIELD UNIT.
Soma Juice 2024 Hardtail "Bike Check"
มุมมอง 1.5K7 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Soma Juice is sold as a frame only. We did this build for a reviewer. Take a look...may it whet your appetite to do your own custom build. Soma uses Tange Prestige Chromoly for all their frame models. (Not mentioned in the video: We keep the fork steerers long in case the customer wants a taller stack. Seatpost is a RaceFace Turbine, 32t chainring on the Aeffect crank, Chromag Lift saddle, ...
Crane SBR Bell for Drop Bars
มุมมอง 5Kปีที่แล้ว
New Crane E-ne SBR allows you to place the bell where you can activate it without removing your hand off the hoods, which allows for quicker rings and enhances rider safety. You can modify placement to fit your hand size and reach and shift lever throw. Uses a brass dome for clear resonant ring. Mount is aluminum (not plastic) for better durability. Made in Japan. (*Model demonstrating bell has...
Luke's Soma Wolverine v4.1 A-Type Big Gravel Energy Build
มุมมอง 3.8Kปีที่แล้ว
2023 Soma Wolverine Build: Size: 66cm (our largest) (Luke is 6'6") Soma Hwy 17 Bar w/extensions Yokozuna cable hydraulic disc brakes and Reaction Cables TRP Brake Levers Microshift Bar End Shifters S-Ride M520 rear derailleur / LTwoo front der IRD Vortex 46-30t Cranks Soma Cazadero 700x50 tires Kasai Dynacoil Dynamo Hub and Trail Light Busch Mueller Secula rear light Brooks Saddle Rivendell Gri...
Testing Osaka Bike Bells
มุมมอง 1.7K2 ปีที่แล้ว
Osaka Bells are not as premium or well known as Crane Bells, but are also made in Japan. All models come in multiple colors. All are affordable and pleasant sounding. www.osakabell.com Available from various bike shops and www.somafabshop.com
Sampling Every Crane Bike Bell 2021
มุมมอง 55K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Giving you a sound test of both Brass and Alloy versions of every Crane brand bicycle bell, some of the highest quality bike bells available. The Suzu, Karen, E-ne, Hand-painted ones, Riten, etc even the new Revolver. Brass dome models are tested first. Then the Aluminum dome models. The brass has more prolonged resonance in their ring. The alloy has good volume too, and won't lose their origin...
Crane Hand-Painted Bicycle Bells - Being Painted
มุมมอง 5K9 ปีที่แล้ว
Crane Hand-Painted Bicycle Bells - Being Painted
Osaka Roadie Bell - Clamps to brake lever hoods and cables
มุมมอง 17K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Osaka Roadie Bell - Clamps to brake lever hoods and cables
Soma Pick Up Artist Cargo Bike - short vid
มุมมอง 3.9K11 ปีที่แล้ว
Soma Pick Up Artist Cargo Bike - short vid
𝚈𝚘𝚞 𝚔𝚗𝚘𝚠 𝚠𝚑𝚊𝚝 𝚠𝚘𝚞𝚕𝚍 𝚋𝚎 𝚌𝚘𝚘𝚕? 𝙰 𝚋𝚒𝚔𝚎 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚑 𝚊 𝟽𝟶𝟶 𝚏𝚛𝚘𝚗𝚝 𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝟸𝟺 𝚛𝚎𝚊𝚛. 𝚃𝚑𝚊𝚝'𝚍 𝚋𝚎 𝚌𝚘𝚘𝚕
They have a good niche market for everyday riders and bikes. I have enjoyed their products.
After biting the bullet and buying one of their m18 racks have yet to find a better built and better looking product
Nice; purple, the proper color for a bike. Can it be built 2x?
ty for landscape
You cannot go wrong with MKS pedals. But can you get similar quality nowadays from other manufacturers? I'm sorry MKS, as much as I love your stuff, it is a fair question. I recently picked up a pair of folding pedals from a Chinese company that seem high quality and of course being from China inexpensive. I see that MKS has something similar in the FD-7, but at $52. I do have two pairs of MKS Touring Sylvans. They are such a classic. I liked the EZY pedals, however my thought was to put the adapter on multiple bikes and move the pedals to the one I was riding, but the adapter is not sold separately. I am using folding pedals on two of my bikes because I have found that in my garage with too many bikes, it is often the pedals which tangle in wheels, derailleurs, chains and fender stays that cause problems. The folding pedals don't eliminate the problem but they make it less of a problem. The solution would be to get rid of some bikes and organize. Are the Sylvan Touring available with a 1/2" shaft for my vintage Schwinn Super Sport? I figure it can be done since MKS makes all the parts and perhaps it could be a matter of just parts swapping. I think the BM-7 would look a little chunky on a Super Sport.
I like
Gotta love that minivelo frame
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year right back at you!
Back in the 80's, Nitto was a nobody company, just another Japanese manufacturer that didn't really have an equal share of the market compared to Sakae Ringyo (SR). I'm not sure when this Nitto obsession started, but I suspect it was part of the fixed gear craze of the mid-late 2000s when everybody wanted the look of a vintage track bike. I'll tip my hat to Nitto today though just because they're willing to collaborate and cooperate with other brands and produce a wide range of stuff I've never actually needed but appreciate for its existence.
I have become more fond of the look of Nitto craftsmanship as I have gotten older. Nitto products have a certain nonchalant elegance to them, they are beautiful in their simplicity and exacting standards. American manufacturers need to visit the Nitto factory floor and learn things.
They really are masters of their craft! Thanks for sharing your thoughts, definitely things I've felt but didn't have the words to describe
Have you been to Honjo factory?
When I was younger I scoffed at Nitto because of the price, then I got my hands on some of their products when I got into more classic style bikes and I realized it's worth every penny. They make beautiful, functional stuff that's completely timeless in my opinion. Soma and Nitto make a wonderful combination.
If Luke is as big as me, I'm 6'5", I'd want a x-large (xx-large?) as well. That would be great news for both of us.
You used landscape orientation! Thanks for listening.
Nobody wants a chinese samurai.
I agree! There’s no planned obsolescence with Nitto.
Love NItto also, but I would like to see more black items from them.
If it's made by Nitto, I know I can trust it not to snap and throw me off my bike haha. nothing by Nitto I have ever owned has failed on me or even worn out and needed to be replaced.
They used to make the pedals for SunTour also. All the Japanese stuff from those old firms like Kashimax, CatEye, Izumi, etc. is great.
Soma, please please please send one small size frame to india pleasee!!!!!!!
GREAT JOB STAN
wish i was rich
I use mine every day. It's so efficient in city trafick.
could you tell me the other mini velo you tried?
i've tried the Soma Mini Velo back in 2012 and the New Albion Microbrew in 2019 (with drop bars and town bars). The old Soma was very nimble like a track bike and wasn't my cup of tea. They both used the larger 451/20" size (1-3/8" wide tires) The chainstay on the Rufus is about 40mm longer than the old Soma. Makes about the length of a CX bike chainstay.
XL please
Very interesting. I’m glad to see the Pescadero back in a new colour. Hopefully a build video is coming soon.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts! I also have a FogCutter (with a black low trail fork) and have been contemplating a Rufus. How does it do on gravel roads like typical bay area fire roads?
I did not take it on extended fire roads, but the owner of B3 Cycles said he took his drop bar build on a 72 mile gravel ride w/ 7000 ft of climbing. Just keep in mind smaller wheels are going to lose momentum more easily than big wheels on rocky roads. They have less roll over ability with obstacles and you'll get more of a workout. You have to be more cautious around divots and potholes. On smooth dirt -- like on a BMX race track --- it ought to ride nice.
These must be about the only remaining realistically rebuildable pedals. Tired of throwing out pedals after a season because a plastic bushing wore out, or an unbelievably tiny cartridge bearing burned out.
Meh...buying stuff from CT is because you want to support the country you live in. All kinds of stuff from overseas is handmade. At least this is handmade by adults and didn't appear to be children or Uighurs in a prison camp. Still useful to know which is the endless options might be decent. Microshift seems fine to me though.
Maybe a hot take but, genuinely have not been all that impressed by MKS over the years. I've run a few different models, serviced a few others, and just don't find them exceptional at all. In fact my abiding memory is of notchy bearings in brand new out of the box pedals.
That gritty feeling is intentional! As the bearings break in, they spin more and more smoothly. That's also something that's present with the IRD QB-55 & IRD QB-75 bottom brackets. With use, the bearings become smoother.
@@somafabrications9345 Really? I can see that with other mechanical systems, but a ball bearing, it doesn't quite add up, as point loads are liable to pit the races, IMHO/IME
@@weatheranddarkness really! As you ride, the bearings slightly wear in, allowing the grease to settle into the contact points more effectively.
@@somafabrications9345this is my experience too, over 4 sets of MKS pedals on different bikes now.
I have to say that that slightly tight feeling goes away after some break-in time. This was intentional on MKS's part. The pedals are built for the long haul.
Soma works with DiaCompe and S-Ride. Rivendell works with DiaCompe and MicroNEW. Interesting.
I had a great experience with their drivetrain on the Juice you sent out. I'd definitely recommend them.
Curious, what seven speed derailleur are u talking about? 1:59
Luke was running the Suntour XC from '85/'86 with three pulleys. Disraeli Gears has a great little blurb about it!
@ thank you, loved this part: "With one brilliant stroke it gave huge capacity with a relatively short cage. Ground clearance was restored, chain slap minimised. Fantastic - except for the fact that it looked so weird that, as you cycled by, dogs barked, babies cried and your friends laughed. At you, not with you."
@@adrianalborez5176 yeah but I always thought that they looked great!
what in the aspect ratio is this
7 minutes in portrait is diabolical.
TH-cam-shorts block browser extension will make youtube play shorts videos in the regular player.
😈😈😈
Great vid!
Thanks much, Russ!
Thank you, great information!
Thanks for the info!
I really like the feel and look of Newbaum's tape and it fades beautifully over time.
Very interesting! I have a question, which of the s-ride would work with my 10 speed diacompe ratchet friction shifter, and shifts up to 40 or 42t?
You could run any of the 7-speed/8-speed, 8-speed, 9-speed, or 10-speed rear derailleurs. What's your gearing? Happy to help sort out compatibility.
yes, informative without stretching my attention span, thanks.👍
Have a Moulton APB, a Rans Rocket recumbent and my favorite, a Gaerlan Go Travel, which are not available anymore. I'm glad someone is offering this sort of thing because they're FUN!!!
You had me at "Made in America". My wife & I have 3, soon to be 4, bikes that need new tape a couple times a year. Definitely will be using Newbaums for a test and hopefully be my go-to bar tape from now on. I have worked in 3 different bike shops, Trek, Specialized and Cannondale and have never heard of Newbaums. Glad to have found y'all.
I've used MKS pedals since 2019 and I'm now looking to get more for my other bikes. Which one of MKS' pedals would you recommend for courier work? I was looking at the "Always" model, what do you think? The CT-Lite Commuter Pedals look good too though, and they even weigh more. So I'm having trouble deciding.
The Gamma and Always are both suupper grippy. I've run the Gamma with both Vans and grippy boots and I feel locked in.
I have MKS Sylvan Track pedals on my main bike. Great build quality. Easily adjustable cup and cone bearings (for a mechanic anyways). Reasonably priced without gimmicks. Looks great. What's not to like?
Sounds like a fun bike.
53 years young and was on a BMX when i was 10, growing up we had peddles we called bear traps, these look on par to them 🤣
I’ve had so many bad pedals that failed quickly that I appreciate nice pedals a lot. I’m running the same MKS always for years on my commuter bike now and the pedals actually outlived a commuter bike! I’m also running ezy superior always and solution pedals on my travel bike :) My coworkers were impressed and bought some too :) Highly recommended