Zipp Speed Weaponryさんのインスタグラム写真 - (Zipp Speed WeaponryInstagram)「SRAM Engineer Jaime Kelleher doesn’t want to let bike parts—even unrideable ones—go to waste. So she transforms them into clocks. Really cool clocks. Kelleher is based at SRAM’s development center in Schweinfurt, Germany, but was at Zipp’s Indianapolis facility recently for meetings. While in Indianapolis, she made this clock from a scrap 858 NSW rim and SRAM PG1230/PG1130 cogs used in testing. Jaime made her first bike-wheel clock in 2014 while working as a mechanic at a bike shop in Colorado. In 2015, she made another clock, using a scrap Zipp rim, which now hangs in her living room. Made from test parts from SRAM Schweinfurt, the clock was featured on the GCN Tech Show. In her almost four years at SRAM, Jaime has worked on mountain bike rear derailleurs and cassettes. She’s now focused continuous improvement projects across SRAM, including Zipp. In addition, Jaime—an avid road cyclist—was a test rider in the development of the Zipp NSW Cognition Hubset and the 303 Firecrest® 650b Tubeless Disc-brake wheelset.  Jaime, who grew up in the Chicago suburbs, studied Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois and then earned a master’s in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Colorado. She was an exchange student in Munich, which helped her develop her German language skills and eventually land a job at SRAM in Germany. She fell in love with cycling in 2010 while riding 4,500 across the United States to raise money for cancer research with the Illini 4000, a student organization at UIUC. She’s also worked as a bike mechanic, directed and organized races, and repaired carbon frames. All that time and passion invested into cycling has paid off for Jaime. #peopleofsram #peopleofzipp」4月18日 22時10分 - zippspeed

Zipp Speed Weaponryのインスタグラム(zippspeed) - 4月18日 22時10分


SRAM Engineer Jaime Kelleher doesn’t want to let bike parts—even unrideable ones—go to waste. So she transforms them into clocks. Really cool clocks. Kelleher is based at SRAM’s development center in Schweinfurt, Germany, but was at Zipp’s Indianapolis facility recently for meetings. While in Indianapolis, she made this clock from a scrap 858 NSW rim and SRAM PG1230/PG1130 cogs used in testing. Jaime made her first bike-wheel clock in 2014 while working as a mechanic at a bike shop in Colorado. In 2015, she made another clock, using a scrap Zipp rim, which now hangs in her living room. Made from test parts from SRAM Schweinfurt, the clock was featured on the GCN Tech Show. In her almost four years at SRAM, Jaime has worked on mountain bike rear derailleurs and cassettes. She’s now focused continuous improvement projects across SRAM, including Zipp. In addition, Jaime—an avid road cyclist—was a test rider in the development of the Zipp NSW Cognition Hubset and the 303 Firecrest® 650b Tubeless Disc-brake wheelset.
Jaime, who grew up in the Chicago suburbs, studied Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois and then earned a master’s in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Colorado. She was an exchange student in Munich, which helped her develop her German language skills and eventually land a job at SRAM in Germany. She fell in love with cycling in 2010 while riding 4,500 across the United States to raise money for cancer research with the Illini 4000, a student organization at UIUC. She’s also worked as a bike mechanic, directed and organized races, and repaired carbon frames. All that time and passion invested into cycling has paid off for Jaime.
#peopleofsram #peopleofzipp


[BIHAKUEN]UVシールド(UVShield)

>> 飲む日焼け止め!「UVシールド」を購入する

3,901

16

2019/4/18

Zipp Speed Weaponryを見た方におすすめの有名人