Greg,
Mamny have missed THIS point. Experience is VERY important in
framebuilding, just like any other craft or skill. The question is
how long does it take to gain such experience? Some say a LONG time
and I say that within 5 years of steady building or even intense
hobby building most will reach a level of BASIC framebuilding skills
pretty much equal to most "masters". If one goes beyond the basics of
framebuilding (meaning using modern frame bits and just putting the
frames together) then it may or may not ever come. That is what comes
from within the framebuilder.
In order to learn a lot in a relatively short time one needs to hang
around a situation where the people know framebuilding. To learn by
oneself by making mistakes and so on is very slow and painstaking.
The best thing would be to work in production for a while OR become
an official apprentice of an experienced builder. The latter
opportunities are extremely rare, as many know. Most of us prefer to
work alone it seems. I work alone and I prefer it. But last year a
young man (about 30 years old) came to me wanting to learn
framebuilding. As always, I was skeptical, but decided to give this
person a chance to prove himself. I gave him 30 days to show me what
he was made of. Within 2 weeks I was concinced this gut was going to
stick around for a few years and he was not only talented; but more
inportantly he is very self-motivated and in alignment with my
personal pholosphies.
Our deal is that he helps me in the paint department sa he learns to
paint and I will help him learn to build frames for himself. He
doesn't do any work on my frames; all of his work goes into making
stuff for himself until he become his own independant framebuilder.
He's making fantastic progress and is into his second frame; and it's
very complex. It's not a bunch of fancy cutting and foo-foo dressing.
He's decided to build a French style ladies bike, for which he is
making his own lugs from scratch. This guy is going places many
framebuilders will never go.
Any framebuilder knows what type of distraction someone hanging
around the shop will be and how much time it will suck out of your
day. Could even mess up tooling or who knows what. Carlos purchased
his own Campy tool case and is collecting his own tools and making
his own fixtures for various operations. But for the cases like this
it comes out in the wash for me because this person learns VERY fast
and has helped me get back to working on frames. I learn a lot by
teaching also, as most people know.
Furthermore, for the benifit of DAZZA, this person will learn how to
design and build bikes and handle customers and other framebuilding
related sitiations that none of the people who go through classes
will ever be exposed to. He will emerge a complete unit will all the
skills of any top framebuilder and will have a special bag of tricks
that can only be had from veteran framebuilders.
I also took on an "intern" from a college in Vermont earlier this
year. He called and wrote to every top builder in the country asking
if he could intern for school credit for a 5 week period. Everyone
blew the kid off. Name a name. He called me on the phone one day to
inquire. I knew it would be happening during the critical weeks just
before the framebuilders show in March and that it would likely be a
bad time to have another body hanging around the shop. But he
mentioned he was an Eagle Scout. I knew the kid could learn something
and he would get a taste of reality framebuilding if he came around.
I told him he needed some experience before he showed up so that he
would understand better what was going on. He would need to provide
transportation for himself and find a place to stay.
Amazingly, the kid took a one week instruction from a framebuilder in
his area, arranged to stay with an Aunt he'd never even met who lived
in La Jolla, and made his way to my shop on his bike and the trolley
every day for 5 weeks without fail. No wonder he made Eagle Scout.
Yes it was a distraction and during a bad time; but he got to see
some intense work on the AeroTour and he got to see what life is like
in the trenches as I did my daily routine. I enjoyed the experience
tremendously and feel the kid helped me in some ways and I was able
to give the kid a once in a lifetime experience.
Experience is neccessary. What kind of experiences one has can make a
HUGE difference. Expreience isn't only just doing work repetatively.
A good teacher can impart experience that can be absorbed by the more
advanced and motivated students.
A lot of what I said in my initial post has been misinterperted by
some readers. I will clarify everything in good time. Right now I
need to head to the shop.
Brian Baylis
La Mesa, CA
I think Nelson Miller has hit the nail on the head ; the Craft of
frame building in my opinion has a fairly direct link to experience,
the Art must come from within. I have no doubt Brian Bayless has an
abundance of both . I simply think he is somewhat mistaken in
discounting the importance of experience in the craft side of frame
building.
Greg Lone Langley B.C. Canada
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