I've been biking for a while now. I started up at some point in College when my chronic foot tendonitis developed into a dysfunction and ensured running would never be an option for me again. At that point I was a broke student who "borrowed" her dad's old road bike to stay in shape. But when COVID hit, it kind of turned into an obsession.
| An old Peugot bike I restored and used as a commuter in college |
So, around spring last year, I started looking for frames online and was instantly disappointed. The big name retailers nearly never sell the frameset (bike frame + fork) alone for the kind of bike I was looking to build. Typically the frames they provide are for extremely premium aero bikes or high performance racing builds. Neither of which I was trying to make.
Eventually I found the ICAN A9.
Pretty much exactly what I was looking for. Lightweight, carbon fiber, inexpensive, works with mechanical groupsets, but has plenty of room for upgrades down the line when I can afford them. On top of all that, it came in this gorgeous white, yellow, and blue paint scheme that I loved.
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| completed frameset, fresh coat of paint :) |
Frame in hand, I was ready to build! I sourced a groupset from my old bike, a complete Shimano 105 R7000, cranks and brakes included. I set up a workspace in an unused corner of my apartment building's basement and got to work tearing down my old bike for parts.
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| my old bike, stripped bare |
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| A box of parts to be reused |
With the easy part down, it was time to get everything onto the new frame. The big issue was that this new bike had cables that were completely internally routed, meaning the only time a cable ever saw the light of day was when it had to connect to a derailleur. That, unfortunately, also includes the handlebars.
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| 4-5 hours later, cables routed. |
Honestly after that struggle, everything else came together pretty quickly. Bikes are actually not that complicated and not that difficult to work on so once the hard part of cable routing was done everything else kind of snapped together.
| nasty ass basement |
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| my assistant |
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| finished! |
This is the first bike I've ever built completely from scratch! It's also the first time I've owned a carbon fiber bike. I totally get why cyclists get weird about making everything carbon fiber now, the weight difference between this one and my aluminum bike is gigantic. It feels light and snappy to ride, and the material difference means the roads feel a little less rough.
I'm super proud that I finished the project too! I have way too many half finished projects laying around my house and sitting in Github repos so dragging this one across the finish line feels really good. There are already several upgrades that I'd like (electronic shifting, carbon wheels...) but those will have to wait a while since everything bike related is expensive at this point.
That's it! Thanks for reading, thanks for letting me be annoying for a little bit. I promise this isn't a bike blog, I just do a lot of biking and love talking about it! I have been listening to Gretel's new album Squish recently, I really like it. I think my Gretel album ratings are:
- Slugeye
- Squish
- Head of the Love Club
The Boston Marathon is on Monday, it's going to be a rainy weekend, and I have a little "staycation" to enjoy. Have a nice day!







