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Reinventing The Wheel

Behind the scenes with Bike Engineers and Entrepreneurs. Fortified Bicycle Alliance.

Tag: Bike Light (page 1 of 2)

Bruno’s Back from Shenzhen and He’s Bearing Gifts in the form of Bike Lights

The excitement level at Fortified HQ is reaching frightening new heights as we rapidly approach the best day of our collective lives.

That glorious day, of course, is the day that we get to deliver the world’s best bike lights to you, the world’s most supportive backers.

The big news of the day is that our rockstar Director of Ops, Bruno, has just returned from our factory in Shenzhen where manufacturing has begun.

In addition to brightening our office with his presence, Bruno came bearing wonderful gifts. No, we’re not talking about the traditional Chinese New Years masks we requested (although those are pretty nifty).

We’re talking about the golden samples of your new favorite bike light!

These magnificent samples are particularly encouraging because, unlike our prototypes, they were produced using the same molds and process that we’ll be using for mass production.

Check out the video below to see the samples in action and hear a brief rundown of the timeline for delivery.

 

Bike Light Manufacturing has Begun!

The current atmosphere at Fortified HQ can be best described as giddy. That’s because, after months of tweaks, banging our heads against the wall and exciting breakthroughs, manufacturing has begun!

Shipping is scheduled for the 2nd week of February. In fact, we’ve got Bruno, our rockstar Director of Ops, on the factory floor right now and he’s passed along some pictures to document the process.

We are always 100% transparent and want to show you everything, so check out the photos below and let us know what other parts of the process you’d like to see from the inside. As always, we’ll do our best to oblige.

Die cast parts just after they’ve been powder coated

Press fitting the parts together

Installing the printed circuit board with LED

Adding the lens

 

 

 

 

Charging and testing battery reliability

 

Sample on-site daily update from Bruno to Fortified HQ (click to enlarge)

Manufacturing with One Hand Tied Behind our Back

Hi all,

Time for us to give you an update on how these lights are progressing.

Delivery Date: It’s mid-January now. That means you can’t give these as holiday gifts – and that makes us really sad. Our advisors remind us, “that’s the nature of startups,” but such reassurances aren’t going to diminish our commitment to getting you the world’s best bike lights as soon as possible.

The Problem: The bike lights have 3 unresolved bugs:

1. Front housing is loose (recently solved! See below for details)

2. Lens on/off button is hard to push

3. Secret battery door is hard to open

The Good News: We know exactly how to solve each “bug.”

The Bad News: We are limited in the changes we can make because we’ve already started the tooling (molds) for the bike lights. We can tweak these molds, but the tweaks must be “steel-safe“. While we’d love to create new tooling, this would push us back 60-90 days - and you can’t wait that long. Subsequently, our engineers are basically designing solutions with one of their hands tied behind their backs.

The Solution: Jonathan, our brilliant new MechE, came up with several workarounds. In short, he came up with a clever way to machine the parts after they come out of the mold, which enables us to test our various solutions to each problem.

Here are a couple pictures we wanted to show you of items we’ve recently machined.

Orange arrows point to the groove that controls the locking of the battery door. These machined “jigs” are designed to dial in the battery collar locking/unlocking tightness. Too loose = water ingress. Too tight and it’s hard to open. We wish we did these 12 months ago but each sample costs ~$1000 and we didn’t have enough money then. Pennywise, pound foolish. Lesson learned.

The front housing of the light was loose. Jonathan, came up with a clever solution: he added “fins” (green arrows) that fit into “holes” (pink arrows) and keep the housing from moving. We’ll explain the jiu-jitsu genius of this over a beer another time, but it is genius.

Next Steps: We’ve been on the phone with the factory from 9-10:30pm four night/week for the last 3 months in order to get these solution implemented. In the coming weeks, our factory will mirror these prototypes in preparation for mass production. Once our solutions have been approved, our Director of Operations (Bruno) will be traveling to Shenzhen to oversee production.

Thanks for sticking it through with us - we can’t tell you how much we appreciate your support.

Ever had your light die unexpectedly during a ride? We’re not OK with that.

We wanted to give you a quick status update on the manufacturing of the Aviator and Afterburner: within the next week, a package of 100 pre-production samples will be arriving at Fortified HQ from Shenzhen, China. We believe most of the bugs we’ve discussed in previous posts have been resolved but we’ll show you when they arrive.

We also wanted to give you an update on another feature we’re tweaking.

Have you ever been in the middle of a ride on a dark night only to have your light die unexpectedly? We have too, and we’re tired of it. Beyond being frustrating it’s frightening and dangerous. That’s why we’re working to make sure this problem never occurs again, by perfecting the low-battery indicator in the world’s toughest bike lights. Enjoy!

Why I Bike

Why I Bike (And How It Almost Killed Me) by Slava Menn as told to Tom Layman

Freedom. That’s why I got on a bike, and that’s why I’m never getting off.

I jumped on a bike 10 years ago, timid as all hell, sticking to the bike lanes, afraid to make moves in the busy, crowded streets of Boston. Then I got a helmet. Then I started riding with confidence and fell in love. And then my new love almost killed me.

My first week on a bike I was in the Back Bay of Boston during a rainy, bone chilling November commute home from work. I moved to the left lane on a busy three lane street and prepared to take a left turn when my front wheel got caught in an expansion joint and I somersaulted over the handlebars. Lying on the pavement I saw the my life flash before my eyes in the form of a black Lincoln Towncar approaching my face. Summoning my inner-ninja in a way that only life-endangering encounters can inspire, I rolled out of the way and onto the curb.

Rattled and road rashed, I took solace in a hotel reception to wash my cuts, compose myself. But something funny and magical happened as I assessed the damage: I realize that this wouldn’t be my downfall. Since that experience, I’ve been riding hard and haven’t looked back.

I occasionally take the subway or drive and around the city, but I’m most free when I’m on my bike. Instead of being underground like a rat or fighting other drivers in my car, I get to ride along the tree-lined Charles River. All it took was a little exercise and endorphins, and I was hooked. So hooked, that I started making rugged urban bike lights.

We started Fortified Bike to make biking a safer and more convenient joy for everybody in an urban environment and hope that by sharing our stories, we could encourage you to share yours.

So what’s your story? Why do you ride and what has it taught you?

Leave a comment or email us at whyIbike@fortifiedbike.com and we’ll interview you for our blog.

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