Moulton Bicycle
Moulton is an English bicycle manufacturer based in Bradford on Avon in Wiltshire. The company was founded in 1962 by Dr Alex Moulton, who designed the "Hydrolastic" and rubber cone suspension systems for the BMC Mini motorcar,[1] and the later "Hydragas" system used by its successor companies.
Moulton bicycles are noted for unconventional frame design, small wheels, and front and rear suspension.
A misconception about Moultons is that they fold in the manner of more recent designs by manufacturers such as Brompton or Dahon. This is not true, though the Moulton design paved the way for such designs and various Moultons over the years have been made in separable versions allowing relatively easy dismantling for transportation or storage. Mass-appeal versions such as the Standard and Deluxe were complemented by Speed versions used in competition.
Thus although Moultons are often included in the folding bicycle category along with small wheel folders, small wheel bicycles would be a more technically correct term covering all such bicycles.
In August, 2008, Alex Moulton announced the creation of a new company called Moulton Bicycle, in collaboration with British bicycle manufacturer Pashley Cycles which had manufactured certain Moulton designs under licence since 1992.[2][3]
History
In the late 1950s, disillusioned with the design of the classic bicycle, Alex Moulton set about creating a new design. He thought the classic diamond frame was inconvenient to mount, difficult to adjust for size and not suitable for both sexes. That 'Ladies' open frame bicycles without the top tube of the diamond frame were structurally compromised for ease of use. He believed that classic bicycles (especially with small frames and smaller wheels known as 'shopper' bicycles) were uncomfortable to ride without the use of wide, low-pressure tyres which increased rolling resistance. He also thought large wheels made a bicycle slow and cumbersome to store, and did not easily fit emerging societal commuting patterns in the developed world, which often combined more than one form of transport.[4]
Moulton considered that small wheels with high-pressure tyres would result in less rolling resistance, less inertia and hence greater acceleration. He then went on to develop a range of high-pressure tyres in cooperation with Dunlop. Suspension for the front and rear was developed to give a comfortable ride with the smaller wheels.[5] In this respect, the Moulton bicycle was truly ahead of its time, as bicycle suspension would not become common for another 30 years.
The Moulton bicycle also featured a different frame instead of the traditional diamond design. It is often known as an F-frame or Lazy F due to its unusual structure. The F-frame had no top tube, as such, and could therefore be easily mounted by those with mobility limitations, whether imposed by physical infirmity or by type of clothing.
Impact
When the design was released in 1962, it was one of the first major innovations in bicycle design since the "safety bicycle" in the 1880s and made an immediate impact. The 1962 version (aka "bicycle of the future") was the first production Moulton bicycle with suspension and the racing version was televised the same year in action by road race champion and Moulton employee John Ronald Tovey. As Moulton bicycles became an icon of the Swinging Sixties and were sold around the world by the thousands, Moulton was briefly one of the largest bicycle manufacturers in Britain. The architecture and design critic, Peter Reyner Banham, known for often controversial views on technology and industrialisation, was a keen advocate and user of the original Moulton. Eleanor Bron's 1978 book Life and Other Punctures celebrates travels around France on an original Moulton. In bicycle culture, the rider of a Moulton bicycle is often referred to as being a "Moultoneer" (a play on the word "Mountaineer").
Models produced
The following list of home-market models were produced between 1962 and 1967 in the Moulton factory at Bradford-on-Avon and in the BMC car factory at Kirkby, Liverpool: Continental and Automatic M0, Standard M1, Deluxe M2, Safari M3, Speed M4, Stowaway M5 and the Speedsix M6. A further low volume, high specification 'S' range of Moulton bicycles was produced separately at another small workshop in Bradford-on-Avon and consisted of the Deluxe MS2, Safari MS3, Stowaway MS5 and the top-of-the-range 'S' Speed. After the Raleigh take-over in 1967 (see below), the models changed to just the Major and Major Deluxe only. These in turn were both dropped with the introduction of the Mark III in 1970.
Sellout
The success of the Moulton spurred competitors to produce their own small wheelers, such as the Raleigh RSW 16. The drop in sales from the increased competition brought the company into financial difficulties and in August 1967 it was taken over by Raleigh. Raleigh then produced both the RSW and the Moulton side by side.
Raleigh produced the Major, Major Deluxe and the Mark III (previous Moultons were known as Series 1 and Series 2). The main differences were a re-designed rear suspension using a rubber ball instead of a block and a rear triangle replacing the swingarm of the earlier designs. In 1974 production of the innovative cycles stopped. Some of the early Moulton bicycles are today considered to be collectors' items.
Re-birth
In the early 1980s, Alex Moulton bought back the rights to the Moulton design from Raleigh, and brought out a design along broadly similar lines to the original. Aimed at the high end of the market, this AM series (which remains in production) has a space frame allowing high rigidity and low weight when compared to traditional steel frames. In 1998 the New Series Moulton was introduced. This, similar to the AM, incorporates a Flexitor front suspension, and a rear suspension based on the unified rear triangle principle. The New Series includes the Pylon and Double Pylon high-performance models: in the latter all large diameter tubes have been eliminated, resulting in a pure space frame design and low weight.
Pashley-Moulton
To bring the new design to a larger market, a cheaper variant of the AM bicycle design, the APB (All-Purpose Bicycle), was produced under licence by Pashley Cycles from 1992 to 2005. To reduce costs, Pashley use off-the-shelf components as far as possible instead of the custom components of the original Moultons: for example, specially manufactured 17 by 1 1⁄4 inch (ISO 369)[6] wheels, tyres, and inner tubes were replaced by the more common 20-inch ETRTO 406 size.
In 2005 the Pashley-Moulton design was updated to create the TSR series: high-performance, lighter versions of the Pashley-Moulton replacing the APB. Production of Moulton designs by Pashley ended after the creation of Moulton Cycle in 2008.[7]
Bridgestone Moulton
A newer model, stylistically and structurally similar to the original Moulton design, was manufactured by Bridgestone. Known as the Bridgestone Moulton, it was built in Japan and those sold in the UK were assembled in England at the Moulton factory. Like the original Moulton, the AM, and the APB before it, it is available in separable and rigid performance versions. Though similar in appearance to the original design, it is a contemporary performance bicycle with advanced design and components. The Bridgestone Moulton page on Moulton's website[8] is linked from the "Heritage" page,[1] but the model is not included in the "Products" page.
Moulton Bicycle Company
As of 2015 the Moulton Bicycle Company Web site listed several models at prices ranging from £950 to £15,500.[9]
See also
- Small wheel bicycle
- Folding bicycle
- List of bicycle manufacturing companies
- Raleigh Cycles
- Me and My Moulton
References
- 1 2 "Heritage". MOULTON Bicycle Company. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- ↑ "Moulton and Pashley join forces to grow Moulton business". June 20, 2008. Archived from the original on August 15, 2008. Retrieved 2015-01-18.
- ↑ "Pashley Cycles teams up with Alex Moulton". Birmingham Post. August 6, 2008. Archived from the original on March 6, 2009. Retrieved 2015-01-18.
- ↑ The Moulton Bicycle Company: Features
- ↑ Hadland, Tony, The Moulton Bicycle, Seattle, WA:The Pinkerton Press, ISBN 0-9536174-0-8 (2000): Smaller wheels have shorter, stiffer spokes; this feature, coupled with smaller high-pressure tyres, produced a harsher ride with equivalent rider weights.
- ↑ Brown, Sheldon. "Tire Sizing". Retrieved 2009-10-04.
- ↑ "Moulton TSR". Moulton Bicycle Club. Retrieved 2015-01-18.
- ↑ "The Bridgestone Moulton". MOULTON Bicycle Company. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- ↑ "Price Icon". Moultonbicycles.co.uk. Retrieved 24 November 2015.
- Cycle magazine, December/January 2005
External links
- Alex Moulton's Memoir
- The Moulton Bicycle Company
- The Moulton Bicycle Restoration Site
- The Moulton Bicycle Club
- Moulton Bicycle yahoo group
- Moulton Bicycle flickr group
- The Folding Society
- The Green Bicycle
- Moulton Buzz
- Dr Alex Moulton on the engineering of the NS bicycle