After several lengthy conversations with Craig, I started looking for a higher end hard tail. I bought a vintage Clark Kent titanium Mt. Bike. It had great frame and nice components to start the build-out with. I will do a future post on this bike. It’s a great ride and it still gets lots of use.
I bought and sold a Trek 5200 - an awesome bike but, as I said earlier, I’m not a Road Biker. I also bought and still own a Flyte XLS-3 Cyclo-Cross. This is another awesome ride. It’s kind of a road bike on steroids made for rough – tough off road racing, which makes it a great trail bike. I’ll do a future post on this bike, too.
The reason I’m not riding the Flyte as this time? I broke my left wrist and can’t ride a drop down handlebar for about a year. I still wanted a bike I could get some miles in during the limited daylight hours of winter, which lead me to a 29er. But what 29er and by who?
For those new to the term: A 29er is basically a Mt. Bike frame set up to have 29” wheels, not 26” which is standard on most Mt. Bikes. Another bit of info: A 29” wheel is the essentially the 700c wheel that is on most Road Bikes.
There are a lot of great stock 29ers out there, but they come with a hefty price tag. It became clear to me that to get what I wanted, I was going to have to build it. My criteria was: speed, comfort, cost, and a certain amount of eye candy… yep I wanted it to look HOT!!!
After some searching I found the Motobecane FANTOM 29 frame. I knew this was the frame I wanted to use to build my very first Urban Prodigy.
This brings me back to Tom’s email last week; the bike Tom asked about is my new custom Motobecane 29er or what I call the “Urban Prodigy” (something wonderful or marvelous; a wonder).
Here are the specs.
Frame : MOTO29X Aluminum with TrailTuned PowerStay Design, DualProfile Downtube with reinforced Gusset, replaceable rear derailleur hanger.
Fork : One on Ridged Carbon 29er
Crankset : Bontrager Race X Lite Carbon
Bottom Bracket : TruVativ Giga X-pipe
Pedals : Bontrager King Earl
Front Derailleur : Shimano XTR
Rear Derailleur : Shimano XT long cage
Shifters : Shimano XT Rapid Fire 27 speed dbl trigger shift
Cassette/Freewheel : Shram 950 9-speed 11-34
Wheels : Bontrager Race Light
Tires : Schwablbe Big Apple
Brakes : Avid BB5 BallBearing Mechanical Disc front and rear, 185mm rotor
Brake Levers : Trytro RS360 A
Headset : Chis King 1 1/8 inch
Handlebar : Bontrager XXX Carbon Riser
Stem : Bontrager XXX Carbon 120mm
Saddle : Bontrager King Earl
Post : Bontrager XXX Carbon 27.2mm
I have around $700.00 in this bike. I was very careful about what I spent. Some parts were used, mostly coming off new bikes that had replacement parts put on.
If you could buy this bike it would probably run in the market of $1500 - $2000.
EXCITING NEWS!!!! Craig and I are going to build a line of “Urban Prodigy” Bikes. We are going to try our hardest to keep the cost under a grand. If you might be interested in one of these LMK. My email link is in the sidebar.







Very cool, I love what your doing with the 29er. My queation is how is the geometry of the Fantom frame equipped for the 29" wheel. Are we talking a comfortable ride here? Not personally having seen the Motobecane frames I wonder about their qualty?
What do you think, I am awfully tempted to dive in to a 29er.
Spidey
Posted by: spideybite | April 30, 2008 at 12:26 PM
Impressive blog! -Arron
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