For A Change: How Sour Bicycles Is Cracking The Recycled-Carbon Code – Travis Engel
BRR Analysis
Sour Bicycles, in collaboration with thermoplastics innovator Herone, has unveiled a novel approach to recycled carbon fibre manufacturing. As detailed by Travis Engel for The Radavist, their partnership focuses on transforming discarded carbon fibres into orderly braided tubes, a method they believe will overcome previous industry hurdles. This initiative represents a significant step towards sustainable frame production, moving beyond traditional thermoset composites.
This development is particularly pertinent given the cycling industry's long-standing challenge with carbon waste, a material notoriously difficult to recycle effectively. While other companies have attempted various solutions, Sour Bicycles and Herone's focus on thermoplastic composites and braiding offers a potentially scalable and economically viable alternative. This could set a new benchmark for environmental responsibility, influencing future material choices and manufacturing processes across the high-performance cycling sector.
Ultimately, Sour Bicycles and Herone are not just recycling carbon; they're attempting to recycle the industry's perception of what's possible. Whether this innovative braiding truly untangles the carbon waste problem remains to be seen, but the industry is certainly watching.
Never miss a story
Essential 2026 Guides
More from this section
- The King is Dead, Long Live the King: Salsa Reinvents the Gravel Race Bike with the All-New FlywayThe Big Ring Report8h ago
Arc’teryx Enters the MTB World With the Rhoam CollectionBikerumor8h ago

