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Allied Cycles doesn't just want to make bikes like the Alfa (above)鈥攊t wants to piece together a whole new model for the industry.
Allied Cycles doesn't just want to make bikes like the Alfa (above)鈥攊t wants to piece together a whole new model for the industry. (Photo: Bryan Clifton)

Your Next Carbon Bike Will Be Made in Arkansas

Allied Cycles, based in Little Rock, is trying to ignite American carbon-fiber manufacturing and steal China's thunder

Published: 
Karklins, through Allied Cycles, doesn鈥檛 just want to make bikes, he wants to build a whole new model in the industry.
(Photo: Bryan Clifton)

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If you ride a carbon-fiber bike, chances are it was manufactured in one of five factories in China. If you ride an American-made carbon model, you probably bought it from a boutique brand and聽paid through the teeth for it. All this might change thanks to聽, which launched in February in Little Rock, Arkansas. Allied wants to make American-built carbon bicycles that can compete with their Asian counterparts on price as well as performance.

And they want to make a lot of them.

罢丑别听 the company鈥檚 signature聽875-gram frame, is聽hand-built in Little Rock and sells for $4,000 when聽equipped with Shimano Ultegra components and Mavic Aksium wheels. (It鈥檚 $2,700 for the frameset.) By comparison, a similarly equipped, likely heavier, foreign-built Specialized Tarmac starts at $3,600, and a Cannondale Evo at $4,200.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to be just another $10,000 carbon-fiber American bike, because we would only sell 100 of them,鈥 Tony Karklins, founder of Allied Cycles, told me when I visited the company鈥檚 Arkansas headquarters last week. Allied鈥檚 current facility can produce聽2,700 frames a year, which dwarfs boutique U.S. carbon brands such as Alchemy, Argonaut, and Calfee, and the company is already looking to expand. 鈥淭he goal is to be a big company. There鈥檚 no reason we can鈥檛 take on the big three,鈥 Karklins says, referring聽to Giant, Specialized, and Trek.

Allied Cycles wants to make American-built carbon bicycles that can compete with their Asian counterparts on price as well as performance.
Allied Cycles wants to make American-built carbon bicycles that can compete with their Asian counterparts on price as well as performance. (Courtesy Bryan Clifton/Allied Cycles)

That鈥檚 lofty talk for an upstart brand, but this isn鈥檛 Karklins鈥檚 first bike race. He founded Orbea USA in 2004 and grew that brand so successfully that, a decade later, the Spaniards bought him out. With聽Orbea, Karklins began to wrestle with the challenges of the cycling industry. 鈥淢ost bike brands don鈥檛 manufacture anything anymore. They鈥檙e paying a factory in Asia, usually the same one that鈥檚 building bikes for other brands, to produce it for them,鈥 he聽explains. 鈥淭hat puts everything out of your hands. The design process is slow and always a compromise. Product is often late. It鈥檚 getting more expensive to manufacture. And it鈥檚 difficult to react to trends because you鈥檙e ordering two years out and shipping bikes across the ocean. I didn鈥檛 want to do that again.鈥

With Allied, Karklins doesn鈥檛 just want to make bikes鈥攈e wants to piece together a whole new model for the industry. How can you make bicycles in the U.S. and be competitive?

The answer, he believes, is to bring everything in house. 鈥淲e have to cut out all the middle men, all the fat, all the bullshit,鈥 he says. Unlike most brands, with manufacturing, assembly, painting, and shipping all happening in different places, Karklins聽wants聽one facility to handle them all. He knew he鈥檇 have to cut out the distribution and inventory process, too, as well as the聽sales force, all of which cost money and add to the final cost of a bike. 聽

While Karklins was formulating the plan for his new company, Guru, a custom-bike maker聽in Montreal, went out of business. Then, in聽February 2016, Karklins bought the company鈥檚 manufacturing inventory at auction. He suddenly owned the second-largest carbon-bike factory in the country, after Trek, which builds some bikes domestically聽and some overseas. About the same time, engineers Sam Pickman聽and Chris聽Meertens, formerly at聽Specialized, were exploring聽business opportunities in carbon-fiber manufacturing. It was a perfect fit. 鈥淚 was moving to Colorado when Tony called,鈥 says Pickman, who now runs Allied鈥檚 development. 鈥淚 ended up in Little Rock.鈥

On Allied鈥檚 factory floor, there are technicians curing frames, others fabricating small parts like drop-outs and seatposts, and still others sanding and painting finished frames and building them into complete bikes.
On Allied鈥檚 factory floor, there are technicians curing frames, others fabricating small parts like drop-outs and seatposts, and still others sanding and painting finished frames and building them into complete bikes. (Courtesy Bryan Clifton/Allied Cycles)

Admittedly, nobody is lining up to buy a bike that鈥檚 labeled 鈥淗andmade in Arkansas鈥濃攜et. 鈥淓veryone wants to be a California brand,鈥 says Karklins. 鈥淏ut our factory space costs $6,000 a month. Rent for the same space in San Diego would be $70,000.鈥 That鈥檚 the kind of thinking that explains聽how Allied is able to create an American-made bicycle at such a low price.

That Allied could go, in less than a year, from being a smart idea to producing a polished bike like the Alfa speaks to Karklins鈥檚 drive and savvy and Pickman鈥檚 expertise. When he bought Guru, Karklins聽also purchased the rights to its custom Photon road bike, not because he wanted to be a custom manufacturer, but because it was a good bike and he could use it to train his manufacturing crew. Allied began rolling these bikes off the line, as the Founder Edition, a little over six months after the Guru auction. (The bike, still fully custom, is now called the .) Meanwhile, Pickman, who was lead engineer on the current Specialized Roubaix and had a hand in several iterations of the聽Tarmac, began creating the Alfa, which was unveiled in late January.

The Alfa I rode in Little Rock lives up to the promise. Over two days, I pedaled the bike just shy of two and a half hours. That鈥檚 limited saddle time, but I could immediately tell that the Alfa is quick, fast steering yet stable, and pleasingly stiff and responsive up front, with rear-end compliance that belies its racy nature. It stands up fine next to bikes like the Evo, Tarmac, and聽Trek Madone聽and probably outperforms them in some ways. 鈥淲e are not limited by the same manufacturing and commercial processes as the big brands,鈥 Pickman says. 鈥淐oming here was about realizing the dream of using everything at our disposal to create a bike, from start to finish, that鈥檚 both competitive and unique.鈥 In addition to smart layups and manufacturing efficiencies, which are important but arcane, Allied鈥檚 built-to-order ethos and custom paint options set the company apart.

Allied also benefits聽from the growing trend of direct-to-consumer sales. Brands such as聽, Evil, and聽YT聽sell聽quality bikes online for around 30 percent less than the big brands, avoiding the substantial markups that come with distribution and retail.聽(Allied and Evil also sell聽through聽select brick-and-mortar dealers at the same prices offered online.)

It all adds up to a sea change in the bike industry, and there鈥檚 nowhere this is more apparent than on Allied鈥檚 factory floor. One woman operates a press that cuts complex patterns from bolts of carbon fiber, and half a dozen others hand-piece them into tubes, joints, and, finally, machined aluminum forms. There are technicians聽curing frames, others fabricating small parts like drop-outs and seatposts, and still others sanding and painting finished frames and building them into complete bikes. It鈥檚 a small-scale production line that still manages to encompasses every part of the manufacturing and assembly process. Right now, the factory is producing about four completed bikes per day, and聽Karklins聽is confident that output will increase聽as efficiency improves.

Building a head tube from carbon pieces is a complex, painstaking process.
Building a head tube from carbon pieces is a complex, painstaking process. (Courtesy Bryan Clifton/Allied Cycles)

Made in America聽has never really resonated that strongly with me, but here, watching three dozen people聽who might not otherwise have聽such good-paying jobs聽build聽high-quality bikes, it struck a chord. Many of these workers have no connection聽to cycling, really, yet they鈥檙e turning out machines that will bring riders a lifetime of joy. Plus, they鈥檙e doing it in Arkansas. Admittedly, there are a lot聽of great bikes out there, produced all around the world. But seeing Allied鈥檚 employees at work,聽with their dedication and precision, made me want to support the company. If you can get a great bike made in your own backyard, with the added value of custom parts and paint, why wouldn鈥檛 you?

鈥淚 want to be the comeback brand of American manufacturing,鈥 Karklins told me. Allied has a long course ahead to meet that goal, but it鈥檚 undoubtedly聽on its way.

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