An Emerald-Isle Mosaic GT-1 iAR
A late night call, a Blarney Stone and a world-class titanium gravel bike.
February 12, 2025
visibilityINTERVIEW
In a new mini-series profiling Regroup people, we talk to our Senior Service Technician, Anthony, a mechanic who breaks with tradition by being friendly and approachable.
WORDS
Regroup staff
PHOTOS
Regroup
Over the next few weeks, we'll be shining a light on the Regroup team, the folks who make our wheels sing, our videos pop and our coffee hot. First under the grill is Anthony, our Senior Service Technician, who was reluctant until we teased him out of the workshop with the promise of a new, even slippier chain wax.
Hey Anthony, thanks for talking to us.
To kick things off, tell us about your path to the bike and the bike business.
Not many people have held onto a bike since childhood.
Yeah, that’s probably true. I had a few bikes as a kid and made a lot of cherished memories. But when I think about it, I didn’t really get into bikes until I was about 18, when I came to the Polytechnic campus of ASU out here, studying to be a Mechanical Engineer. I didn’t graduate, but I did three and a half years. Some life issues I had to attend to pulled me away, and I never made it back. Anyway, while I was there, I went to a work-study initiative called the Bicycle Co-op, where I could work on my bike, with the cost borne by a portion of my tuition fees. If you were an active student, it didn’t cost anything to keep your bike in good shape unless you needed some major work.
So the Co-op was your gateway to get into bikes, proper?
For sure. It was a real learning experience because I got to work under the guy who started the program, who was an incredible technician. I don’t know whether he got his version of a bicycle degree, but he was a consummate professional. And pretty much everything passed through the shop – quill stems, old-school integrated hubs, one-piece cranks, cantilever brakes, the works.
Those technologies are a world away from what we might consider a modern bike, but I'm guessing they gave you a solid grounding that set you in good stead.
100%. The wide-span experience I got at the Co-op helps with day-to-day problem-solving here in the Regroup workshop. You develop a mechanical sympathy when you’ve seen, worked on, and fixed so many types of technologies, taken some of those disparate parts, and made something out of them. I rely on that experience daily here at Regroup when we’re creating a dream bike or working on a tune-up or upgrade in the workshop.
What bike were you riding back in college?
Having seen your incredible Mosaic GT-1, I get the feeling you have an affinity for metal machines.
Did you make any significant changes to the Volk?
Yeah. I cold-set the rear triangle and put a quick release x 135mm on it so I could run some of the more modern hubs coming out then, with the better engagement and sound everybody liked. Over the years, that bike transformed so many times, from a city thrasher with shorty bars to the road and drop bars to a capable long-distance commuter and even a gravel bike, as I could squeeze 32 tires in there.
I have a theory that unless we tinker with the things we buy, they don't stay with us. I learned that with my Pegoretti, which I've slowly upgraded over a few years. Along the way, those changes seemed to make it more 'my bike' than when I first got it.
After college, you started working professionally in the bike industry, right?
Yeah, that’s right. My buddy looped me in on a role as a salesman at a bike shop. That wasn’t my forte, but it was a job. I enjoyed talking to people and helping them find the bike they needed rather than the one they wanted. I was too fond of people to sell anybody a bike I knew wouldn’t be good for them.
You didn't sell your soul.
How and when did Regroup come into the picture?
That sounds intense.
I hear on the grapevine that you blew people away.
You've been with Regroup for a good while now. Can you walk us through your usual day?
That's awesome.
It's been a pleasure chatting to you, Anthony!
FEATURED PRODUCT
Explore Anthony's ride of choice, the Mosaic GT-1, a handmade, high-grade titanium gravel bike built to rule the trail.