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First Look: Mason Progressive Cycles

The full lowdown of the first two models from Dom Mason, the Resolution and the Definition, plus exclusive pics

We had that Dom Mason around here at road.cc HQ on Monday to give us an exclusive first look at the initial two bikes from Mason Progressive Cycles, and here they are.

We showed you a few sneaky snaps of the bikes just before Christmas but this was the first time we’d seen the bikes in the flesh and had the chance to get the full story.

Tell you what, I know you’re pressed for time so here are a few bullet points to get you up to speed before we crack on with the details.

• Dom Mason, formerly of Kinesis UK, has just set up Mason Progressive Cycles
• The initial offering is one alloy frame, the Definition, and one steel frame, the Resolution, built to the same geometry.
• They’re both designed for disc brakes, come with internal cable routing, and are made in Italy.
• Both have clearance for 28mm tyres and full mudguards, and also have rack mounts.

How should you choose between the two bikes?

“They have the same geometry but the different materials put them into different brackets,” says Dom. “The Resolution is the mile-munching smooth steel machine with spring to it, and the Definition is more like a punchy bike for attacking, taking corners fast. They are both designed for a fast spirited ride, with the geometry being suited to long rides.”

We've got a whole lot of info so let’s break it down into bitesize chunks.
 

Innovative use of tubes

Brands will often go to a tubing company and buy a complete ready-designed tubeset, but Dom has been more inventive than that.

The almost D-section down tube of the Resolution, for example, is Columbus Spirit steel tubing with walls that taper down to as little as 0.4mm, but it has been flipped so that the opposite edge from normal is at the top.

Dom has used a faceted oval top tube and he has positioned both the seatstays and chainstays in unconventional orientations to get the results he wanted.

“I spent ages at Columbus in Milan. We were looking at seatstays and they were all too heavy, too straight, the bend was wrong, or they were too low end. Then the guy came back wiping down these tubes that had been in a corner: super narrow road stays that flare out to the hub. I twisted them 180º and found I could get the larger tyre and mudguard clearance that I wanted. They also provided the hourglass profile I wanted for comfort.

“It was a breakthrough moment, so I thought I’d keep flipping things and did something similar with the chainstays. We added custom bends to accommodate the disc calliper and rotor.

“The big profile down tube means the bottom bracket doesn’t twist and the oval top tube keeps it laterally inflexible. With the hourglass seatstays and fairly deep chainstays, the tubeset does exactly what I wanted it to do.”

The Definition frame is made from Dedacciai aluminium alloy – 7000 Series, triple butted and heat treated.

“I spent a fair amount of time choosing these tubes too. The large diameter down tube keeps things stable and the horizontally ovalised top tube does the same job as the one on the Resolution. The builder has done a beautiful job of making it flow into the top of the seatstays.

“Getting the frames right has taken longer than I thought because I’ve done things differently and had to persuade the framebuilders to do things they didn’t want to do, like putting on the disc brake mount and incorporating the MultiPort routing [see below], but I’m very happy with the results,” says Dom.


The Devil’s in the detail

Talking to Dom, you notice that he’s dedicated to getting the details of the design exactly how he wants them. In fact, that’s a massive understatement. He’s obsessed by it.

We showed you his MultiPort system before. It uses a stainless steel oval part that brazes to the Resolution’s frame allowing the use of adaptable cable routing.

An alloy part is bonded into the stainless steel oval and a flip/flop alloy insert fits in there that allows you to run a wire through for a Di2 electronic gear change system, or a split outer mech cable, a full outer cable/hose, or you can blank off the port entirely.

The front mech cable comes out just in front of the bottom bracket and is taken around the BB shell by a small guide that has been designed and made especially for Mason Cycles. It is 3D printed in the UK. The cable stop faces downwards so that it doesn’t collect water and gunk, and it’s removable if you are running Di2. The idea is to keep the shifting precise over the long term.

Another clever feature is the Definition’s bottom bracket. It uses a 50mm shell but it steps down for a standard threaded 68mm-width bottom bracket to fit in there. Why? It leaves enough space for the rear mech cable/wire and rear brake cable/hose to run internally, and it also gives maximum weld area for the large diameter down tube. It’s very neat.

There are loads of other features that have been similarly meticulously thought through: the staggered positioning of the ports on the Definition’s down tube so that the cables sit neatly, eyelets positioned so that the mudguard stays are straight, a neat little exit plate for a Di2 front mech wire... All kinds of little bits and pieces that add up over the entire frame.


Mason’s own Aperture fork

The full-carbon fork fitted to both the Resolution and the Definition is Mason Cycles’ own Aperture design (the pic below shows the various stages of the process from 3 .

“The fork I wanted wasn’t available,” says Dom. “I didn’t want a cyclocross fork and every road fork was either the wrong shape, too harsh or too short with not enough clearance. I wanted a square profile [under the crown] so I could fit a square profile mudguard in. If you have a curved profile there it pushes a square profile mudguard down 10mm, I also wanted internal routing, discrete eyelets, a proper taper steerer and my exact crown height, so I bought my own tooling and made my own fork.

“It makes way more sense to design the frame and fork in conjunction to complement each other, rather than finding an aftermarket fork and making the frame work with it.

The fork is a tapered (1 1/8in to 1 1/2in) design with what Dom is calling Securaxl dropouts. They’re open (as opposed to thru-axle), forward facing and deep.

The Aperture fork, which unlike the frames is made in Taiwan, can take a 28mm tyre with a full mudguard. It would be a relatively easy job to switch to a thru-axle design if that’s the way the market heads in future, as seems likely.


Hunt wheels

We told you last month that Mason Cycles have teamed up with new British brand Hunt for the wheels.

“As with the fork, I was looking around for wheels for ages and there wasn’t anything that was exactly right for the bikes” says Dom. “They were either too expensive or the right price but too heavy.

“I was talking to Tom Marchment of Hunt and I asked if we would work together. I gave him my ideal wheel build and he did loads of research and got seriously nerdy, sourced the right parts and came up with the right wheels: Tubeless compatible, true disc-specific, asymmetric rims for correct dish with discs, EZO Japan bearings, J-bend spokes with brass nipples, centrelock brakes, nice and light... They have everything that I wanted.”

 

High-quality finishes

The finish on each of the bikes looks very high quality. They’re painted in Italy and they go to another Italian facility for the decals.

Wouldn’t it have been easier to get the painting and the decals done in the same place?

“Yeah, but the paint factory I’ve used has a really good reputation and the finish is way better than on anything I’ve done before; two coats of lacquer and it doesn’t scratch,” says Dom. “There is one particularly good decal factory in Italy which I knew was the one I wanted to use and they’ve turned out brilliantly.”

The steel Resolution has an anti-rust treatment inside too.

Because of the way that they’re positioned, the decals are very visible from the side and back of the bike but they disappear almost completely when viewed from the front or three-quarters on.


Looking to the future

Both the Resolution and the Definition should be available to buy at www.masoncycles.cc sometime in March, probably towards the end of the month. They’ll be available as framesets as well as complete bikes.

We’ll have more on the Resolution in the next few days because our man Stu took one for an exclusive First Ride and he’ll be back with his thoughts soon. He’s currently cogitating.

So, what next after these initial two bikes make it to market?

“I want to do a sporty adventure bike and a cyclocross bike,” says Dom. “I’ve call the brand Mason Progressive Cycles because I don’t want to do retro, backward-looking products. Everything I do will be using new technology. I love the idea of blending new tech with traditional craftsmanship.

“I would like to have those bikes out by three-quarters of the way through the year in an ideal world. I want to maybe bring some production to the UK at some point too, like doing a steel frame in Sheffield.”

Look out for our First Ride on the Mason Cycles Resolution in the next few days. For more info go to www.masoncycles.cc.

Mat has been in cycling media since 1996, on titles including BikeRadar, Total Bike, Total Mountain Bike, What Mountain Bike and Mountain Biking UK, and he has been editor of 220 Triathlon and Cycling Plus. Mat has been road.cc technical editor for over a decade, testing bikes, fettling the latest kit, and trying out the most up-to-the-minute clothing. He has won his category in Ironman UK 70.3 and finished on the podium in both marathons he has run. Mat is a Cambridge graduate who did a post-grad in magazine journalism, and he is a winner of the Cycling Media Award for Specialist Online Writer. Now over 50, he's riding road and gravel bikes most days for fun and fitness rather than training for competitions.

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68 comments

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Scoob_84 | 9 years ago
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Will Dom give any indication of maybe looking at producing a race frame in the future with calliper brakes?

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Darren C | 9 years ago
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When describing the fork design, he is quoted as saying " I wanted a square profile [under the crown] so I could fit a square profile mudguard in" but the bridge on the seat stays are curved (see 2nd from last picture) and don't look like a square profile mudguard will fit (with the bolt being higher than each end where it joins the seat stay  7

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chrisb87 | 9 years ago
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yummy, next winter bike build!

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dave atkinson | 9 years ago
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nice to know we've been around long enough now to be considered an Old Boy's Club. I remember when we didn't have two users to rub together and we couldn't give a Genesis tee shirt away, etc and so on.

Dom has a history of making interesting bikes. he offered us a look at his new ones, we said thanks very much. If you don't want to know about new and interesting bikes, this probably ain't the website for you.

I'm interested in how you'd find out about new and interesting bikes at all if the people that made them didn't market them, and the cycling media didn't report on them? I mean, it's kind of what we do.

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only1redders replied to dave atkinson | 9 years ago
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Chill, everyone. They haven't even ridden the thing yet

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runskiprun replied to dave atkinson | 9 years ago
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you guys give free t shirts away???

man, I'm hoping to land one of your schwag bags too, can I cross your palm with silver *hush hush wink wink*

 24  24  24  24  24

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raleigh853 | 9 years ago
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It appears to me the only thick ones are those swallowing all this marketing. That is being rammed down their throats by the old boys club that is Road CC.

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Jonny_Trousers replied to raleigh853 | 9 years ago
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raleigh853 wrote:

It appears to me the only thick ones are those swallowing all this marketing. That is being rammed down their throats by the old boys club that is Road CC.

An excellent point. I've got to say, though, kind of weird how you and Dean both make the same kinds of grammar and punctuation mistakes.  3

Edit* Ooh, your both from "Yorkshire & Humber" too! What are the chances?

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userfriendly | 9 years ago
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I want both of them.

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The _Kaner | 9 years ago
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I'm going to buy one of these bikes and ride it whilst wearing my Assos ijklmno:bonkers shorts, my new data print Rapha jersey and a Vulpine Harrington, Dromarti brogues and a pair of D&G ruby encrusted sunglasses....that's how crassly classy I am....

and I don't give a fig newton who berates me for it...I don't even need to know how much it costs...dahlinks....

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mooseman | 9 years ago
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The Resolution. Oh God, yes! Wrap it up I'll take it. Any plans for custom sizing?

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Sven Van Anders | 9 years ago
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What's not to like?

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ianrobo | 9 years ago
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beautiful looking bikes

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bendertherobot | 9 years ago
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These look wonderful. Nearest thing, for me, though admittedly it's a CX, is the Ritchey Swiss Cross Disc. That's snuck up to over a grand now for the frame and fork.

These are going to be more. Much more I feel.

Want.

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robert.brady | 9 years ago
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Is there any info on sizes/geometry available yet?

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Jonny_Trousers | 9 years ago
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Why on earth are we discussing the prohibitive cost of one of these bikes when none of us know what it is yet?

DeanF316's attack is coming across far more as personal than reasoned and is probably best left ignored. I suspect most of us know there is far more to creating a business from the ground up than making the item you are selling by hand yourself.

As someone who's been researching the do-it-all with discs bike market for a little while now I'd say that there really isn't that much out there, and that these Mason bikes are a very welcome addition.

Personally speaking, I think they look gorgeous, and if they ride well, and the price is competitive, I'll gladly be signing on the dotted line.

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joebee9870 | 9 years ago
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you can buy a pair of jeans out of primark or from versace. They both do the same thing. You can buy a bike from halfords or from this guy again they both do the same thing. If we only made one of everything think how boring life would be. If you want one, get one. If not, get another.

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disco | 9 years ago
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There are bikes you know are going to be good, and those that are going to be less so. It looks like Mason's in it to excel. Chapeau to him.

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DeanF316 | 9 years ago
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Sorry Dom but are you not just another company that can't make its own products. Effecfively a marketing company that uses badge manufacturing companies.

And when will you stop telling people that you use to work at
Kinesis. Looks like Kinesis apprear still be able to develope and make bikes ok.

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aslongasicycle replied to DeanF316 | 9 years ago
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DeanF316 wrote:

Sorry Dom but are you not just another company that can't make its own products. Effecfively a marketing company that uses badge manufacturing companies.

And when will you stop telling people that you use to work at
Kinesis. Looks like Kinesis apprear still be able to develope and make bikes ok.

To produce frames at a lower cost and in any kind of volume requires a factory. That's an enormous investment an individual can't afford. Or even a small to medium sized business. I couldn't hand sew all Vulpine's products! (and nor should I, because I'm rubbish at sewing and cutting, but anyway). I own a beautiful Feather. Ricky makes his own bikes, but his waiting list is enormous and the prices are (rightly) very high.
Dom Mason is similar to myself and others who work very hard to design, develop, R&D and then manage the manufacturing process themselves to create beautiful products that can be bought by more than a few people.
That he worked at Kinesis ("worked" is a gross understatement!) is massively relevant. They're held in high esteem and those who don't know Dom want to know if he has experience. His experience carries weight.
I like Mason a LOT because, in order:

They look like damned fine frames. I want one.

Dom has taken a huge personal risk with his family to go it alone and start his own company. That takes huge cojones.

He's quite nice.

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DeanF316 replied to aslongasicycle | 9 years ago
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I know he has but I have to read an article about his new brand that doesn't mention he worked at Kinesis.

I suspect that Dom's bikes won't be cheap so why go to man that can't make a frame when they are numberous execellent bespoke frame makers in the UK. I fail to see what Mason offer that want make people wait to for Dom get his bikes to market. No prices yet , no availability and we are nearly into March.

I'm sure Dom is a great bloke but that won't sell him any bikes. Looking at the comments so far on this article his product is yet another bike feature that peopel have on their wish list but can't afford so they will end up buying a Kinesis or Giant or Specialized etc. If wanted a top end steel bike I would go direct to a builder and buy the components via internet. I wouldn't go to a man that goes to Italy to get maded for me. Kinesis seem to have the Aluminium road disc option covered plus they have the fantastic Ti Grandfondo. The thing with Kinesis is that prices are very competitiive. I wish you the best of luck Dom I think you are going to need it.

As regarding you it says all you need to know about Vulpine and 'so called manufacturing' when own a clothing brand but you can't even make use a sewing machine. It's just marketing keep telling people for long enough how brilliant you eventually few people believe. Personally I wouldn't use a Vulpine jersey to clean my bike with.

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dave atkinson replied to DeanF316 | 9 years ago
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DeanF316 wrote:

I know he has but I have to read an article about his new brand that doesn't mention he worked at Kinesis.

I suspect that Dom's bikes won't be cheap so why go to man that can't make a frame when they are numberous execellent bespoke frame makers in the UK. I fail to see what Mason offer that want make people wait to for Dom get his bikes to market. No prices yet , no availability and we are nearly into March.

I'm sure Dom is a great bloke but that won't sell him any bikes. Looking at the comments so far on this article his product is yet another bike feature that peopel have on their wish list but can't afford so they will end up buying a Kinesis or Giant or Specialized etc. If wanted a top end steel bike I would go direct to a builder and buy the components via internet. I wouldn't go to a man that goes to Italy to get maded for me. Kinesis seem to have the Aluminium road disc option covered plus they have the fantastic Ti Grandfondo. The thing with Kinesis is that prices are very competitiive. I wish you the best of luck Dom I think you are going to need it.

As regarding you it says all you need to know about Vulpine and 'so called manufacturing' when own a clothing brand but you can't even make use a sewing machine. It's just marketing keep telling people for long enough how brilliant you eventually few people believe. Personally I wouldn't use a Vulpine jersey to clean my bike with.

why would we *not* say that he worked at Kinesis? under his stewardship they made two road.cc bikes of the year. he knows how to make a good bike. that fact that he doesn't weld the tubes together himself - but instead works with experts in the field - is a massive irrelevance in the same way as your ill considered rant about vulpine.

you don't want one, so fine. don't assume that everyone's like you.

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jova54 replied to DeanF316 | 9 years ago
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DeanF316 wrote:

I know he has but I have to read an article about his new brand that doesn't mention he worked at Kinesis.

I suspect that Dom's bikes won't be cheap so why go to man that can't make a frame when they are numberous execellent bespoke frame makers in the UK. I fail to see what Mason offer that want make people wait to for Dom get his bikes to market. No prices yet , no availability and we are nearly into March.

I'm sure Dom is a great bloke but that won't sell him any bikes. Looking at the comments so far on this article his product is yet another bike feature that peopel have on their wish list but can't afford so they will end up buying a Kinesis or Giant or Specialized etc. If wanted a top end steel bike I would go direct to a builder and buy the components via internet. I wouldn't go to a man that goes to Italy to get maded for me. Kinesis seem to have the Aluminium road disc option covered plus they have the fantastic Ti Grandfondo. The thing with Kinesis is that prices are very competitiive. I wish you the best of luck Dom I think you are going to need it.

As regarding you it says all you need to know about Vulpine and 'so called manufacturing' when own a clothing brand but you can't even make use a sewing machine. It's just marketing keep telling people for long enough how brilliant you eventually few people believe. Personally I wouldn't use a Vulpine jersey to clean my bike with.

Nice to see some comments from a well balanced individual, massive chip on each shoulder; and your grammar is atrocious.
As Dave says, if you don't want to buy it don't. There are however plenty of people without your prejudices and ill-manners who like and buy Vulpine products and have respect for what Dom has done both at Kinesis and now with his own money with Mason Progressive Cycles.

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bjeato replied to DeanF316 | 9 years ago
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Yeh, and I won't buy Samsung either as Lee Kun-hee can't build his own Galaxy S5.

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Chuck replied to DeanF316 | 9 years ago
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DeanF316 wrote:

As regarding you it says all you need to know about Vulpine and 'so called manufacturing' when own a clothing brand but you can't even make use a sewing machine. It's just marketing keep telling people for long enough how brilliant you eventually few people believe. Personally I wouldn't use a Vulpine jersey to clean my bike with.

This is really quite bitter and doesn't even make sense. Why on Earth would it matter if Vulpine guy can sew or not, or whether Mason makes his frames himself?

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wrevilo | 9 years ago
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The Kinesis disc frame will be an obvious one, as Dom left Kinesis to Found Mason.

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Scowel | 9 years ago
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Been thinking custom steel road disc but the steel jobby looks the business, maybe my search will end here

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only1redders | 9 years ago
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Dom said he's still finalising pricing at the moment, so watch this space

Difficult to compare I guess when you're not looking at apples vs apples. What is the 'equivalent' model to this from another manufacturer?

Personally, I am looking forward to seeing the fast touring model, as looking at PBP this year and weighing up different types of machines, of which there are many!

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bikeandy61 | 9 years ago
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Too many bikes to choose from even discounting a bespoke dream build from field and Shane. But these 2 are on the list. Come on lottery gods. No job so sadly depending on hopeless odds.

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ronin | 9 years ago
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Nice bikes...

But I wouldn't want one if it was Free  4

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