Surly Bikes

Surly Bikes
Type Private
Industry Bicycles
Founded Minnesota, 1998
Headquarters Bloomington, Minnesota, USA
Website www.surlybikes.com

Surly Bikes is a designer and importer of bicycles, frames, parts, and accessories based in Bloomington, Minnesota, established circa 1998. Surly is owned by and shares facilities with Quality Bicycle Products (QBP).

The company is well known in bicycle messenger and single-speed culture and helped establish the Single Speed World Championship (SSWC). Surly specializes in steel bicycle frames. Frames are made in Taiwan from 4130 cromoly steel.

Distinctive components made by Surly include the Dingle cog, cranksets with separately detachable spiders, reversible chain tensioner, and the "Large Marge" an unusually wide bicycle rim. Surly also sells lifestyle items such as wool jerseys and flasks bearing the Surly logo.

Contents

Frame Models

In 2005, Surly began selling the Pugsley, the first mass-produced mountain bike with extremely large volume tires, up to 4 inches wide, for deep snow and sand riding.[1] The front and rear wheels share a common hub size and can be interchanged, allowing for additional gearing combinations. Noted bicycle technical authority Sheldon Brown said, "Pugsley is, in its way, as revolutionary as the original mountain bikes were in the early 1980s."[2] Bicycling Magazine wrote, "It's not ideal for everyday use, but it can handle a wide variety of demands and conditions well."[3]

In 2006 Surly introduced the Big Dummy, a longtail bike frame designed for the Xtracycle Free Radical extension that can carry 200 lbs of gear in addition to a 200 lb rider.

Other Surly bikes include:

Surly also produced a mountain unicycle, the Conundrum.[4] (Discontinued)

Components

References

  1. ^ Regenold, Stephen (July 2006). "Adventure bikes :: Gear Review :: July, 2006". http://thegearjunkie.com/gear-review-adventure-bikes. Retrieved 2008-05-15. 
  2. ^ Brown, Sheldon. "The Amazing Surly Pugsley!". Archived from the original on 2006-04-28. http://web.archive.org/web/20060428112822/http://sheldonbrown.com/harris/surly-pugsley/index.html. Retrieved 2008-05-15. 
  3. ^ Cassidy, Chris. "Surly Pugsly". Bicycling Magazine. http://www.bicycling.com/gear/detail/0,7989,s1-16-90-2710-0,00.html. Retrieved 2010-10-16. 
  4. ^ "Surly 2008". http://surlybikes.com/files/Surly_CatV2_2008_lo_res.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-15. 
  5. ^ Ikerd, Harold. "Surly's Dingle Cog". Bicycle Fixation. http://www.living-room.org/dingle.html. Retrieved 2010-10-16. 

External links