Bicycles

BikeCAD lets you design your dream bicycle online, for free

BikeCAD lets you design your dream bicycle online, for free
Example of a project being developed on BikeCAD Pro
Example of a project being developed on BikeCAD Pro
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The BikeCAD Fit advisor
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The BikeCAD Fit advisor
The starting template for designing a road bike on the basic version of BikeCAD
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The starting template for designing a road bike on the basic version of BikeCAD
Example of a project being developed on BikeCAD Pro
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Example of a project being developed on BikeCAD Pro
A singlespeed rigid mountain bike made by Burls, designed on BikeCAD Pro
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A singlespeed rigid mountain bike made by Burls, designed on BikeCAD Pro
The wood(!), carbon fiber and titanium XS road bike made by Independent Fabrication, designed with BikeCAD Pro
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The wood(!), carbon fiber and titanium XS road bike made by Independent Fabrication, designed with BikeCAD Pro
The Leopard, made by Vicious Cycles, designed with BikeCAD Pro
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The Leopard, made by Vicious Cycles, designed with BikeCAD Pro
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Anyone who likes bicycles has at some point probably fantasized about it - getting their own one-of-a-kind custom-made bike. There are oodles of independent frame-builders out there who will gladly accommodate such fantasies, but their services generally don’t come cheap. Building a high-end bicycle from scratch definitely requires a lot of skill, and even designing one isn’t something that just anyone can do… or is it? BikeCAD, a free online applet, guides users through designing their own road, mountain, tandem or recumbent bike. They can then take their finished design to a builder, or even attempt to build the thing themselves.

The purpose of BikeCAD

Canadian mechanical engineer Brent Curry developed the program. “BikeCAD was originally intended to allow custom frame builders to quickly design a bike and easily obtain the lengths and angles at which to cut the tubes,” he told us. “Over the years, BikeCAD has been enhanced to account for component designs, spoke length calculations, and paint schemes… With all of BikeCAD’s added features, the program now appeals not only to frame builders, but also bike shops, bicycle fitting specialists and serious cyclists.”

The starting template for designing a road bike on the basic version of BikeCAD
The starting template for designing a road bike on the basic version of BikeCAD

What you do with it 

The basic, free version of BikeCAD is available as an applet through Curry’s website – this means that instead of downloading it, you just use it online, but save your project to your own hard drive. You start by selecting the type of bike you want to design, which can include road, kids, recumbent, tandem, plus hardtail and full-suspension MTB (there’s also a version for building wheels). Then, through the program’s customizable Fit advisor, you enter your personal body dimensions, and the optimum frame geometry will be automatically determined for you. Tinkerers and/or know-it-alls can then proceed to tweak some of these numbers, although they do so at their own peril – that said, professional frame-builders receiving these designs would likely question any really inappropriate geometry.

The BikeCAD Fit advisor
The BikeCAD Fit advisor

BikeCAD for the big boys 

And on the subject of professionals, there are apparently at least 200 of them, all around the world, using Curry’s software. For users like these, he developed BikeCAD Pro, the paid, downloadable version of BikeCAD. It sports a pannier-load of extra features, including the ability to reverse-engineer bikes from digital photos, and an animated human figure that rides your designs, to show how the client would interact with the bike. There’s also a third version of the program, called BikeCAD for the Web. Bicycle builders can install it on their websites, so prospective clients can create their own bikes, but only within parameters set by the builder – the distinctive graphics, components and other features unique to their brand will always be present, while anything that strays from their design philosophy won’t be possible.

The man behind it all

Brent Curry himself would definitely be worthy of a Gizmag article. He started his career at Vitus Cycles in France, went on to build mail delivery bikes in Australia, and then worked under renowned frame builder Chris Dekerf in Vancouver. In the winter of 1999, he was part of an unsupported team that rode a thousand kilometers across the Canadian Arctic. He has built a number of experimental bikes, including the fabulously-goofy Couchbike, a couch on wheels that he pedaled across Prince Edward Island in 2002. Although there’s no option for designing your own Couchbike on BikeCAD, you can rent the original from him, along with a variety of other non-traditional human-powered vehicles. You can check it all out, and use BikeCAD or purchase BikeCAD Pro, at his Bicycle Forest website

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4 comments
4 comments
Razali Osman
to all my cycling budies.
Sambath Pech
Wow. Never knew such a free application exists. I built a mountain bike from scratch and can't seem to figure out what's causing my arms and back to become so sore after a short ride. I've mixed many bike components and it still hasn't changed. I'll play around with this app to see what the problem might be. Thanks for the article.
bigorangetruck
Sounds Cool! Though I'm always leary of doing "free design" and handing it off. I knew a designer that went to Igloo (coolers) and said " I've got this awesome idea, and even a proto type! A cooler with wheels!! They said "no thanks" and immediately introduced a cooler with wheels to their line. All he could say was "oh well" :(
Annie Green
This is a perfect idea. I would love to design my own bicycle for my height and needs. Whoever came up with this is a genius.