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Bob Jackson
built 634 days ago
Each Bob Jackson frame is individually hand built to the cyclist exact specifications. These frames are fully custom built in the truest sense of the word. When a cyclist is willing to invest in a high quality bicycle, there is no reason why he or she should have to settle for a frame that “almost fits perfectly”. This includes the basic geometry as well as the length of the top tube, a problem of particular concern to woman riders who have difficulty adapting to the top tube lengths dictated by an ”average” man’s body proportions.
Bob Jackson is an experienced parish minister, trained economist and was a member of Springboard, the Archbishop of Canterbury’s initiative to encourage, renew and mobilize the Church for evangelism. His previous book Hope for the Church (Church House Publishing, 2002) received widespread, positive reaction. He is currently the Archdeacon of Walsall and the Growth Officer for the Diocese of Lichfield.
All Bob Jackson frames and forks are fabricated in their own shop in Leeds, England. No operation involving their building and / or painting is contracted out. 1997 saw Jackson Cycles move to a larger and more modern shop, better enabling them to carry on their tradition of hand building quality cycle frames.
Bob Jackson was the manager of the English football club Portsmouth F.C. from 1947-1952. Jackson led Pompey to the only two league titles in their history in the 1948/49 and 1949/50 seasons. He departed in the summer of 1952 to take over at ambitious second division club Hull City, but could not replicate the success he had at Fratton Park.
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BADFINGER replaced Pete Ham by Bob Jackson who had just left ROSS. The new line-up rehearsed a lot for the next tour. Only a short time before the tour started, Pete Ham wanted to rejoin BADFINGER.
Bob Jackson Bob Jackson, who attended Iowa State in the 1940s, says that the most important (and hardest) course he took there was plant physiology. He points out that 95 percent of a tree's production is derived from biological processes such as photosynthesis, decay, and respiration. Most of the weight of a tree comes from the atmosphere; only a small fraction is derived from soil minerals. It is the fungi, bacteria, and other organisms that make up the soil food web, in the upper layers and surface of the soil, that make a forest possible.
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