Wheelbuilder Recommendations in/near Boston?
#1
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Wheelbuilder Recommendations in/near Boston?
Hey, I’m wondering if anyone can recommend a great wheelbuilder in/around Boston from recent experience? I’m looking to have a pair of touring wheels built up from pre-bought parts, including a front dynamo hub. It would be great to hear if anyone had a really good recent experience, especially with getting strong touring wheels built. Thanks!
(*I posted this in the regional section as well but got no responses, so I'm trying it here)
(*I posted this in the regional section as well but got no responses, so I'm trying it here)
#2
Clark W. Griswold
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You might try Peter White in New Hampshire. Not super local but close enough and well respected and knows his stuff. Plus his website is always a hoot and so old school. You might try Sheldon Brown 's old shop Harris Cyclery, I would hope the high standards have been kept up and they probably have at least one person who can build a decent wheel.
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#4
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I had a pair built at Wheelworks in Belmont last year, 650b’s. Turned out quite well. If you visit the store, talk with Peter Mooney. He’s a principal of the shop and a frame builder. I recall the build charge was $40 or $45.
Would second Peter White in NH, but it’s a haul.
Would second Peter White in NH, but it’s a haul.
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I had a pair built at Wheelworks in Belmont last year, 650b’s. Turned out quite well. If you visit the store, talk with Peter Mooney. He’s a principal of the shop and a frame builder. I recall the build charge was $40 or $45.
Would second Peter White in NH, but it’s a haul.
Would second Peter White in NH, but it’s a haul.
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#8
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You might try Peter White in New Hampshire. Not super local but close enough and well respected and knows his stuff. Plus his website is always a hoot and so old school. You might try Sheldon Brown 's old shop Harris Cyclery, I would hope the high standards have been kept up and they probably have at least one person who can build a decent wheel.
I had a pair built at Wheelworks in Belmont last year, 650b’s. Turned out quite well. If you visit the store, talk with Peter Mooney. He’s a principal of the shop and a frame builder. I recall the build charge was $40 or $45.
Would second Peter White in NH, but it’s a haul.
Would second Peter White in NH, but it’s a haul.
Thanks for the advice everyone! I had originally planned to have them done at Harris Cyclery (legendary Sheldon Brown's place, so obvious choice) but found that when I had my headset installed there, they had torn the gasket about a quarter of the way around on the fork crown race that Cane Creek cleverly puts on there, which felt like disheartening negligence. I certainly wouldn't want such negligence (small but noteworthy) on a pair of fairly expensive touring wheels.
Peter White's website is indeed fantastic but he's pretty far from Cambridge and I've already assembled the wheel parts (mostly from Germany) and I don't think he'd be thrilled to take a job like that -- but he would be very high on the list as a wheelbuilder, for sure.
The other one that's crossed my radar is Woody's Cyclery out in Middleton (just a half-hour south of Cambridge) whose website says: "All wheelbuilding is done by Master Wheelbuilder John (aka Woody) Stanwood, and come with an unconditional guaranty of quality and a one-year warranty against spoke breakage (if wheel is built to Woody’s recommended spec), along with one year’s free truing (barring crashes and abuse)," and also that "All wheels are fully handbuilt, threadlocked (Linseed oil on vintage wheels by request!) and are fully tensioned to the CORRECT tension for the rim, spokes, hub and intended usage – and we verify all tension levels with a Tension meter, not our fingers, no black magic or hocus-pocus." Has anyone had Woody's do wheels for them? I'd be very interested...
#9
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BCDrums I've heard of Peter Mooney's frames but I've found both Belmont and Ace Wheelworks shops to give quite unreliable service -- for which they're unfortunately notorious. If Mooney himself was building the wheels I might be much more inclined, so that's something to definitely consider. Does he build the wheels himself?
Thanks for the advice everyone! I had originally planned to have them done at Harris Cyclery (legendary Sheldon Brown's place, so obvious choice) but found that when I had my headset installed there, they had torn the gasket about a quarter of the way around on the fork crown race that Cane Creek cleverly puts on there, which felt like disheartening negligence. I certainly wouldn't want such negligence (small but noteworthy) on a pair of fairly expensive touring wheels.
Peter White's website is indeed fantastic but he's pretty far from Cambridge and I've already assembled the wheel parts (mostly from Germany) and I don't think he'd be thrilled to take a job like that -- but he would be very high on the list as a wheelbuilder, for sure.
The other one that's crossed my radar is Woody's Cyclery out in Middleton (just a half-hour south of Cambridge) whose website says: "All wheelbuilding is done by Master Wheelbuilder John (aka Woody) Stanwood, and come with an unconditional guaranty of quality and a one-year warranty against spoke breakage (if wheel is built to Woody’s recommended spec), along with one year’s free truing (barring crashes and abuse)," and also that "All wheels are fully handbuilt, threadlocked (Linseed oil on vintage wheels by request!) and are fully tensioned to the CORRECT tension for the rim, spokes, hub and intended usage – and we verify all tension levels with a Tension meter, not our fingers, no black magic or hocus-pocus." Has anyone had Woody's do wheels for them? I'd be very interested...
Another thought; there's craft and experience involved in making a good wheel, but not magic. I would think any well-established shop would have a competent builder. Good luck.
#10
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Thanks for all this [MENTION=354412]BCDrums[/MENTION], I really appreciate the input. I actually bought the parts because I had a very specific idea of what I wanted, and because the parts I wanted were much cheaper coming from Germany, even with $40 for shipping. I've emailed a bit with John at Woody's now, but it sounds like he doesn't like using parts he hasn't sold himself in case they fail (which is understandable), so I'm seeing how I can convince him They'll do it at Wheelworks but it's quite expensive, Mooney doesn't build any of the wheels himself, and again I unfortunately don't really trust them so much, too many very young, inexperienced people being put to tasks that take real know-how. I can see how it could be very hit-and-miss.
The other place I have in mind is Somervelo, I really like the guy who runs the place and he seems very competent. Can anyone speak to a good wheelbuilding experience from Somervelo?
Thanks very much again to all!
The other place I have in mind is Somervelo, I really like the guy who runs the place and he seems very competent. Can anyone speak to a good wheelbuilding experience from Somervelo?
Thanks very much again to all!
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#12
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Just to be clear...
They'll do it at Wheelworks but it's quite expensive, Mooney doesn't build any of the wheels himself, and again I unfortunately don't really trust them so much, too many very young, inexperienced people being put to tasks that take real know-how. I can see how it could be very hit-and-miss.
Good luck with your wheels.
#13
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Last edited by Bmach; 01-05-21 at 08:43 PM. Reason: Ignore
#14
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I have been to bike shops full of people in their first jobs. Wheelworks is not one of them. The guy who built my wheels in 1990 is still there. The staff and the mechanics have gray hair, and many of them have been at the shop for years. And you get what you pay for there.
Good luck with your wheels.
Good luck with your wheels.