This Brompton was upgraded with 18″ Big Apple wheels, Alfine-11 hub gears, and TRP Spyre cable disc brakes…
Continue reading “Alfine-11 18″ Big Apple Upgraded Brompton”3-Speed Belt Drive Brompton
This custom Brompton was a bit experimental, a build to see if it’s possible to make a conversion kit to give a normal 3-speed Brompton a belt drive. It all works nicely, so this will be a kit soon!
Continue reading “3-Speed Belt Drive Brompton”Barbour Brompton Rohloff Conversion
This Brompton conversion has Rohloff gearing with integral rack, and cable disc brakes.
Continue reading “Barbour Brompton Rohloff Conversion”Bright Blue Belt Rohloff Brompton
This custom Brompton build – the second of a pair – has Rohloff hub gearing and Gates belt drive, 18″ Big Apple wheels, integral rack and Magura MT5 hydraulic disc brakes.
Continue reading “Bright Blue Belt Rohloff Brompton”On Standards
A reasonably common question I get asked about my Brompton frame parts is what standards are they built for (and why)?
All my forks are 100 x 9mm QR, rear triangles are 135mm x 10mm, and disc mounts are IS (International Standard), intended for 160mm rotors.
Some people do ask about through axles, flat mount, and other standards – so why do I stick with these older standards? There’s a bunch of reasons:
- Compatibility: a few hub gears can be made to work with through axles, but everything works with 135x10mm, and it can also work with derailleurs and pretty much anything else. At the front, 100x9mm works with disc hubs, dynamo hubs, and it works nicely with the fork hook. For disc mounts, IS allows a wide choice of brakes.
- Ease of manufacturing: Not a trivial concern when I make several hundred of these every year! Flat plate dropouts and disc mounts are much quicker to manufacture than through axle or different disc mounts.
- Cost: A connected reason (because time is money) but different standards would either need more expensive parts, or would need custom parts made via more expensive processes (CNC machined vs laser cut).
- Being ornery: New standards come and go, sometimes the new standards actually make something better, sometimes they’re just a marketing thing, sometimes they’re a good idea but not for little folding bikes. Bromptons don’t need the stiffness of through axles or the aerodynamics of flat mount brakes.
White Belt Rohloff Brompton
This custom Brompton build – the first of a pair – has Rohloff hub gearing and Gates belt drive, 18″ Big Apple wheels, integral rack and Magura MT5 hydraulic disc brakes.
Continue reading “White Belt Rohloff Brompton”Dark Blue 18″ Rohloff Brompton Conversion
This conversion of an older Brompton has a brushed stainless rear triangle with rack, Rohloff 14-speed gearing, 18″ Big Apple wheels, SP hub dynamo lighting and Magura MT5 disc brakes.
Continue reading “Dark Blue 18″ Rohloff Brompton Conversion”Brompton Upgrades By Model
Brompton’s naming conventions are a bit confusing, and have changed several times, so I thought I’d put together a simple table to show you what upgrades are possible on the different models:
A and C Line All Older Models apart from X | All conversions are possible, by replacing the rear triangle and/or forks |
P and T Line Older X Superlight Models | Hub gear and belt drive are possible by modifying the titanium rear triangle All conversions are possible, by replacing the rear triangle and/or forks |
G Line | Hub gear and belt drive are possible |
Electric | Hub gear, rear disc brake and belt drive are possible Wheel size change is possible with a front V-brake instead of disc |
Cream Ti Rohloff 18″ Brompton
This custom build – the second of a pair – has a Brompton-copy titanium frame, Rohloff gearing with belt drive, integral rack, 18″ wheels with Billy Bonkers tyres, disc brakes and a front electric assist.
Continue reading “Cream Ti Rohloff 18″ Brompton”Grey Lacquer Ti Rohloff 18″ Brompton
This custom build – the first of a pair – has a Brompton-copy titanium frame, Rohloff gearing with belt drive, integral rack, 18″ wheels with Billy Bonkers tyres, disc brakes and a front electric assist.




