Hi Steve!
R&E do make lovely bicycles. Living here in the Pacific Northwest, I see them occasionally and am always impressed by their design and workmanship. I once had the pleasure of meeting Angel Rodriguez and Glenn Erickson, and found them to be very engaging and pleasant people to speak with. They were both real craftsmen, and it was always a real joy to see their latest designs.
They have now left R&E for other pursuits, but the service and frame shops carry on with the old R&E name under the direction of Dan Towle, a former employee (
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/web_articles/mr_rodriguez.html ). He is a talented and thoughtful writer on bicycle-related topics, and has written a number of interesting articles...with topics related to future-proofing bike design, chaos in the industry, and non-standardized designs. R&E feel very strongly that when you buy a bike, you also a bike shop and service what they build.
R&E do have a sometimes remarkably different view from Thorn when it comes to configuring a Rohloff drivetrain. The R&E FAQ has a section detailing their Rohloff philosophy here:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/popups/rohloff-clickbox.htmlTo briefly summarize, R&E...=
Don't like Rohloff EX click-boxes (but use them with disc brakes).
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Prefer open cable runs along the left downtube and chainstay.
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Much prefer (Bushnell) eccentric BBs to other forms of Rohloff chain-tensioning, incuding slotted/sliding dropouts and chain tensioners.
They have also developed the (Dave) Bushnell bottom-bracket eccentric in-house and prefer it to a pinch-bolt approach. I think it is fairest to say that like Andy Blance at Thorn, R&E have developed a design philosophy that works well for them and their customers...but the two approaches differ in some key ways and are diametrically opposite at times. Which is "best" depends on what the customer is looking for and how the bikes will be used.
R&E's FAQ is here (includes their Rohloff philosophy):
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/faq.htmlTheir article repository is here:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/web_articles/article-index.htmlBushnell eccentric:
http://www.rodcycle.com/eccentric.html(Story behind the Bushnell eccentric):
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/ebb-article/ebb-article.htmlBushnell's site with FAQ at bottom of page:
http://www.bushnelltandems.com/eccentric.html...And here are some links to articles Dan and others have written; these have applicability across the industry:
Thoughts on what makes a bike comfortable:
http://www.rodcycle.com/articles/comfort.htmlIndustry weight claims:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/web_articles/weight-a-minute.htmlChanging standards and dimensions -- for profit!:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/web_articles/chaos.htmlConsiderations for a "forever" bike:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/web_articles/chaos.htmlAre smaller wheels slower?:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/650-speed.htmlOn discs brakes vs v-brakes and cantis:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/brakes.htmlOn the diminishing returns and increased costs of ever more "speeds":
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/web_articles/retrogrouch.htmlOn the value of steel vs. other frame materials:
http://www.rodbikes.com/articles/material-world.htmlBest,
Dan.