|
RICHARD SACHS CYCLES No. 9, North Main Street Chester, CT 06412 USA |
| HOME | ABOUT | CONTACT | ARTICLES | GALLERY | SACHSTOYS | RIDERS | LINKS |
|
Richard Sachs' Story
by Caryn B. Davis The following article was originally written for INK Publications: A guide to finer living in Connecticut and Abroad.
Richard Sachs has been building Richard Sachs bicycles and bicycle frames for over 30 years. Each is handcrafted to the exact measurements of the person it is being built for, so the bicycle fits the rider much like a tailored suit fits the wearer. Equally recognized for their comfort, precision and performance, Sachs' bicycles have changed little over the years and are still made using traditional hand-building methods. With singular vision, Sachs has selectively culled what works for him and sticks with it.
Sachs spent the first 20 years of his career "figuring out what he wanted a Richard Sachs bicycle to be". So what exactly is that? For one thing, they are not massed produced but carefully crafted to order. And while some of the ideas for the designs and materials that Sachs employs are available to other people, he also uses proprietary pieces and fittings that he developed. Each piece has to be "delicate, beautiful, precise and easy to work with" because in addition to performance, Sachs also believes the end product should have a pleasing design sensibility. So even though he may utilize some preexisting components, it is Sachs' "thumbprint" parts, his ideas, and his workmanship, that make a Richard Sachs bicycle a unique product.
Sachs' cycles are an infusion of art, geometry and mechanics. In the late 1970's he had a major break through with regard to his designs after watching a National Geographic special entitled "The National Living Treasures of Japan." "I knew I was looking for something more in frame building. I saw this program and was inspired by the Japanese reverence for quality handmade articles of all types, some important, some mundane, but all constructed with respect to craft, skill, and heritage, and I suspect, with little or no regard to commerce or promotion. My attitude towards frame building embraces this attitude. No bicycle could have ever had the impact on my decisions and choices the way the topic of that program did", says Sachs.
The summer between high school and college proved to be a fateful season for Sachs. He tried to get work as a bike mechanic, but couldn't secure a position. Not content to take no for answer, and in an act of defiance for being refused work as a mechanic, Sachs wrote to several bike companies in England that he found in the pages of a trade magazine, and offered free labor in exchange for an education in bicycle frame building. He boarded a plane for London to apprentice with Witcomb Lightweight Cycles and postponed his college education. He stayed at Witcomb for almost year before running out of money, but had learned enough to parlay his experience into a bike maker's career or "at least the start of a bike makers career", reflects Sachs.
Sachs passion for bicycle building is rivaled only by his passion for bicycle racing which has been doing steadily since 1971. He boasts a cat 2 license (in the world of bicycle racing only a cat 1 license is better and only few hundred people earned it), and has qualified to ride in the USA Cycling National Championships six times on the road and twice on the track. He has been racing with The Connecticut Yankee Bicycle Club since 1974 and his frame building business has been the official title sponsor of the team since 1981. He has also been a faithful sponsor and participant of Cyclo-cross teams in the US for the past 10 years, and has been instrumental in helping the sport to gain popularity. Richard Sachs, along with RGM Watches and Hudson Valley velodrome are sponsoring Richard Sachs' four-person Cyclo-cross team for the 2005-2006 season. (Cyclo-cross is an off-road race that takes place during the fall and winter months. It is a grueling, one hour race through woodland trails, meadows, mud, steep hills, pavement and grass. It requires frequent maneuvers of dismounting and remounting when the bicycle can no longer be ridden up a particularly muddy or vertical incline and has to be carried on the shoulder until remounting can occur.) Richard Sachs' four-person Cyclo-cross is competing in the New England Championship Cyclo-Cross Series, at UCI events across the US, and in the US Nationals. Sachs has dedicated his life to cycles and cycling, but what else would he do? "I never really had the thought: What am I going to do with the rest of my life when I get through with this bike thing, because it just kept going. Why would I trade this for anything? Being in the bicycle business and the whole life style that comes with bicycle racing seems to suit me. I like bikes. Bikes are cool."
Richard Sachs is a craftsman framebuilder who has been refining his skills for over 30 years. For more information, please contact:
|