The Rodeo is purposefully engineered to take on Red Bull Rampage — the gnarliest of all mountain bike competitions. Miller thought, “To prove this type of manufacturing, this concept, let’s make a bike that people are going to do crazy stuff on. And if we can do that, we know we can apply this technology to other products.” The Rodeo has proven that a 3D-printed bike is entirely possible, but currently, the main drawback is cost.
Now, it’s the engineering and programming time that jacks the cost up, not the material itself. It’s still technical work to fine-tune how the robotic printer head puts out the carbon strands, where the fibres go to be most effective and to strengthen the overall design. With time and production at scale, 3D-printed bikes could be the exact cost or even cheaper than current manufacturing processes, and the future possibilities are exciting. Theoretically, a customer could message the Revel design team and request a slight change in reach, frame length, or increased suspension. With a few simple tweaks of the computer model, a complete custom bike could be printed at manufacturing costs like a factory model. But for now, the Rodeo would cost more than a Rivian, leaving downhill riders drooling in anticipation.