About Me

My photo
Back in my hometown of Jonesboro., Arkansas, United States
My name is Dimitri Harris and I have been building frames for over 9 years now. I learned the basics after spending two weeks with Koichi Yamaguchi. He is one of the most interesting people I have ever met and I am thankful to have worked with him. Since then I have just been building one frame after another and learning as much as possible along the way. I build steel fillet-brazed frames that go by the name of MEECH, which is an old nickname that I have had since I was a kid. I build mostly cyclocross frames because I love their versatility however I also do road,single-speed, and mountain bikes as well. Custom frames start around $1400. All the frames are handmade by me here in Jonesboro, Arkansas. I am insured and guarantee all of my work so if you are in the market for a custom steel frame I would be glad to build it for you. I am also building frames from carbon fiber so if you would like to ride a prototype frame give me a shout. Thanks for stopping by. You can email me at meech151@hotmail.com or call (870)897-6703 or visit www.meechcustombicycles.com Thanks.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Rain, Rain, Go Away

Its been raining and storming all over Arkansas as well as a lot of other states these last few days.  This is what it looks like in front of our house right now.  This morning I had to take my wife to work because her RAV wasn't quite big enough to go through it.  Later that evening I went to pick her up and when we got back then I couldn't get through it in my truck.  Luckily there is a little gap between some trees behind the house and I can sneek it through the back yard if I need to.  I haven't been riding much at all this year and this is making it that much more difficult.  I used to go out training in the rain without giving it much thought but now I seldom do it.  If you called me a "fair-weather rider" I couldn't say much back.  These days I spend more time building bicycles than riding them but I can turn on a dime if I so choose.  I'm only 4 lbs. over my race weight right now which is amazing considering all the junk food I have been eating.  Yesterday I went to the store to get some cat food and had to have a box of Little Debbie Swiss Cake Rolls.  I ate half the box on the way home and the other half over the next couple of hours. Hey, at least I didn't eat the cat food. Yes, I'm an addict and not even this lake in my front yard could keep me from a candy bar if I start to crave it.  Have you tried the new 3 Musketeers Truffle Crisp?  Don't do it.  Man, its still raining out there.  I wonder why the mail didn't come today?

Nice and Snug

Just started a new touring frame for a local rider here in the Mountain Home area.  Its always good for your brazing strength to have a nice, tight fit before ever lighting the torch.  Paragon dropouts have some really nice lines. Top-shelf components for sure.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

road bicycle cycling crash at 70kph helmet cam

This reminds me of a little road outside Granada, Spain I have ridden on many times.  Helmet cams are crash magnets.  Not sure what he said but crashing is a universal language so we can imagine.  Nobody got hurt in this video so its fair game to laugh at, and hopefully it won't be one of us next time. He got up pretty quick, think I probably would've stayed down a little longer.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Jim's Ride the Rockies Ride

Just got Jim's road frame back from the powder coater a couple of days ago and here is the finished product.  We went with a Pearl White powder coat and a coat of clear on top of that to give it a little deeper look.  Since the frames are handmade here in America we decided to wave the flag on this one with some good old red, white, and blue decals.  Jim hasn't seen them yet so I hope he likes 'em.  Cool thing about decals on top of the clear is that they are easily changeable to a different style should you so choose.  I love the look of the beefy Life chainstays and the Pear-Penta shaped down tube.  This is the frame Jim is building up for the upcoming Ride the Rockies ride this summer.  We got some SRAM components on the way and hopefully this thing will be on the road by next weekend for some solid training. Check out the trademark Pegasus head badge by Revolution Cycle Jewelry, definitely worth the  extra weight. Thanks Jim and enjoy the ride.  







Saturday, April 9, 2011

First Carbon Build



I finally got caught up on the orders I had and was happy to have some time to experiment so I started on my first all carbon frame that I have been planning to build.  If things had gone as planned it would already be done but you know how that goes.  Anyway, I haven't done enough to get excited about anything yet although I clearly am.  Whenever you're doing something you are unfamiliar with it always seems more interesting.  All I have done so far is set the dropouts and miter and glue the rear chain stay to the bb shell. This rear end is the Dedacciai Firebox that I bought from Nova.  It was one of the cheaper rear ends and I thought it would be good for the first attempt, who knows how this thing is gonna end up. I haven't decided if I am gonna overbuild this frame for security reasons or see what I can get away with, probably gonna shoot for the middle of the road on this one since I'm the guinea pig. (How do you spell guinea pig?) There are better ways of doing the bb but with this frame I wanted to start at ground zero so I just took an old steel shell that had various cuts in it and wrapped it with a couple layers of carbon.  It seemed pretty solid and with a little sanding was close to perfectly round.  I think most of the big hitters in custom carbon frames use a titanium bb shell and epoxy it inside of a carbon tube of the correct diameter.  It looked a little cleaner than mine however after looking into it it looks as though the ti shell is as heavy or heavier than the steel, not sure why, maybe thicker walls are needed with ti.  I never jumped on the titanium bandwagon because I never saw any advantages to it.  I know there are some beautiful titanium frames and many people say the ride is unbelievable but it never seemed to me that titanium was the best at anything.  It tries to mimick the ride of steel but from what I gather its not near as stiff.  Its lightweight but not near as light as carbon, then when you throw in the cost factor it leaves me wondering if it can be the best choice.  Finally, you don't see it in the pro peloton, it came and went pretty quick.  These are merely my opinions and I have very little knowledge of titanium so I am open to being schooled.  With that said, it just doesn't interest me.   Back to carbon, who cares about titanium.  I haven't ridden a carbon bicycle since I started building frames.  I used to love LOOK frames and my last carbon frame was the Scott CR1 but after I built my first frame I had to support the MEECH brand, afterall its me.  I always wanted to ride the LOOK 595 but never got a chance to, and now there are a handful of other frames I would like to test ride as well like a TIME, Cannondale, and Cyfac and then I would also like to ride a custom Nick Crumpton frame just to see how a custom handmade carbon frame feels compared to a factory frame.  My buddy Yancey has an Orbea Orca that is a couple of years old an although I have only ridden it for less than a mile it seems to have some pretty advanced steering, it would be nice to test ride one of those in my size as well.  But anyway it looks like the next carbon frame I will be riding will be the one I am working on.  I don't believe anything will  ride quite as nice as a steel frame with a steel fork but I just wanted to build a carbon frame to see, go for the sub 16 pounder you know.  Building just one won't be sufficient but it will be a start.  I just got another order for a steel touring frame so I guess the carbon build is going back to the back burner for a while longer.  I have a couple of frames that should be coming back from the painter shortly so keep a look out.  Chao.

Monday, April 4, 2011

J. Holsted's Frame

Finished Jim's frame up last week and everything turned out sweet. Here are a few photos showing the work.  We are going with a Pearl White powder coat on this one and we decided to go with a Ritchey Pro Carbon fork instead of steel in order to shave some more weight off.  I couldn't believe it when I hung it on the scale and it weighed in at under 4 lbs., mind you this is a size 61cm steel frame with tubes that only big boys are allowed to play with. Don't want to bore you with more photos of fillet-brazing because I know most of you have seen tons of fillet-brazed joints but I continue to post them so that the customers or any new comers to the site can see the work that is under the paint.  Enjoy and check back in a few days for the finished product. Chao amigos.