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'96 Shockabilly Mk.II M/L. (it's baaack) - $1450 + shipping

zonq

Member
I had pretty reluctantly posted this back in Sept but took it down after I thought I could make it work with my very specific & tricky build. Finally tried it and nope. Back up on the bloc...

This is the more fully ironed-out final version of the Shockabilly, with Chris & the gangs' own much laterally stiffer & more modern rear suspension design. And stiff it is, the power foundation is a LOT of oversized & box section steel, & there's no play in the pivots but they rotate smoothly without a shock installed. The rear seatstay strut is interestingly skinny for a light action & feel compared to all the beefy rigidity in the rest of the frame. Also has a 1.125" steerer so you can even run a fairly modern fork. It's in pretty excellent condition as pictured, minus the usual spot of chainring rub on the paint these all seem to get the first time you shift to the middle ring. No rust in the seat tube, paint on the dropouts is even still pretty clean. I do have the original seat clamp with the usual crumbling green seal, was going to list it for anyone who wants one, but if you buy this frame before it sells I'll just throw it in. Size is M/L, the perfect size, color is sparkly sapphire fade and if you have not seen one of these out in the sunshine, brace yourself. If you wanted a vintage bike you can ride into your o my aching back era that rides as nicely as a modern short travel FS bike, this is it.

You can build & enjoy it the way is was made, but if you like to tinker, the entire bell crank is just a pair of flat aluminum plates, and everything is coplanar to them, so you could easily draw the frame components in cad, fit them into newer geometry, travel, and shock length dimensions, and put a fancy new rear shock on it to make it ride just how you want it. Had it worked with the build I have to put on it, I'd have probably done that over the winter.
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zonq

Member
Frame #2: Merlin Extralight/Fake Chance. This was an early attempt at creating the ti road frame Chris was riding back in the mid-late 90s. Back then modifying a Merlin was the only way to have (something like) one, & Merlin being born on the frame jigs of Fat City is just part of the jam. I had a pair of GP Wilson dropouts & little conical caps I was going to bolt on in place of the merlin ends. Pretty sure I built them into something else. Painted full frontal zigzag & stickered to death in full team Fat livery, this 30yo titanium frame is a 57cm (cen to top) square, weighs a feathery 2.66lb, and sports all kinds of outdated features like 130mm spacing, QR dropouts, rim brakes, a really exciting 1" headtube, and takes a 31.8-32mm seat collar & snug 27.2 post. The old Fat Ti headbadge was nicked ages ago & I figured eventually I'd just rivet a Merlin headbadge on it, strip the whole thing and resticker it as a Merlin to sell it on ebay. ...but figured I'd see if one of you Fat fanatics want it as-is for your coffee cruiser first. $475 + shipping on here.

If you want to have a lengthy legal discussion about frames with other brands stickers on them, welcome to Fat Chances long history of being the frame under other manufacturers labels.
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Note the tiny ding at the corner of the H there.
 
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