I would LOVE to see photos of your MTB conversion
#51
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Here's my Stumpjumper on a tour in Quebec last August. It didn't take too much to change it over and it rides very nice. The first pic is just a day riding around Montreal without baggage.
#52
GO BIG RED
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Bikes: 1996 Bianchi Veloce 1993 Bridgestone MB-3 1992 Trek 700 1992 Trek 820
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#54
Bicycle Repair Man !!!
My 1987 Kuwahara Cascade which was a purpose built hd touring bike in it's day... after fixing it I also added the drop bars.
The bike is a delight to ride.
The bike is a delight to ride.
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Hah! The 'Comp' version of this bike (purple instead of red) is decomposing in my garden. It was my faithful companion for more than 20yrs, until I tried to improve it by changing the front brakes but only managed to wrench one of the braze-ons right off the fork. I was gutted.
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#57
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Bikes: S&S coupled Specialized Hardrock
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1996 Specialized Hardrock, S&S coupled, Spiderflex knockoff seat, XTR hubs 36 hole, Velocity Cliffhanger rims, Schwalbe Marathon plus tires, TW Bents trailer.
I crossed Mexico with this rig, the picture was taken somewhere in Tamaulipas
I crossed Mexico with this rig, the picture was taken somewhere in Tamaulipas
#58
Bicycle Repair Man !!!
Aside from the wheels everything on the bike was built from recycled / salvaged parts... this is a theme that all my bikes share.
#59
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Countrydirt,
I'm sooo happy to see a Trek 4300 being use as a touring bike!! I had a Trek 4500 (2000) when I was still a uni student. It was my first MTB so I wasn't expecting much from it, but I slowly started to appreciate it a lot over the years, never had it failed on me. However, I sold it when I had to move back to Canada after my study.
Now, I'm planning a trip in Australia. Seeing you able to put a front and rear rack on it has made me thinking about getting a 4300 for the tour. Was it easy putting the front rack on the fork (did you have to modify anything for the bike to take the front rack)?
I'm sooo happy to see a Trek 4300 being use as a touring bike!! I had a Trek 4500 (2000) when I was still a uni student. It was my first MTB so I wasn't expecting much from it, but I slowly started to appreciate it a lot over the years, never had it failed on me. However, I sold it when I had to move back to Canada after my study.
Now, I'm planning a trip in Australia. Seeing you able to put a front and rear rack on it has made me thinking about getting a 4300 for the tour. Was it easy putting the front rack on the fork (did you have to modify anything for the bike to take the front rack)?
#60
Senior Moment
Here's a before and after of my '88 KHS. I am calling it my poor man's Atlantis. I've since added a rear rack.
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that's as good as benjeboy. It's this kind of stuff that made me get a custom 26" wheeled touring bike 14yrs ago after mtn. bikes were in peak production and touring bikes were rare. I fixed up a friends rockhopper like that with drop bars and bar ends with front/rear blackburn racks.
#64
Senior Moment
Hey, rodar, yes it's fully lugged double butted cromo. My photos aren't very good, but here's a closer shot of the head tube that shows the lugs a little better. It's really a great looking frame, and the color scheme is original.
I have recently installed a rear rack, and as soon as the weather allows, I plan to start commuting on this bike.
I have recently installed a rear rack, and as soon as the weather allows, I plan to start commuting on this bike.
#65
GO BIG RED
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grinningfool, That's a great looking bike!
#66
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Location: Highland Park, NJ, USA
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Bikes: "Hildy", a Novara Randonee touring bike; a 16-speed Bike Friday Tikit; and a Specialized Stumpjumper frame-based built-up MTB, now serving as the kid-carrier, grocery-getter.
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Tubus racks, Ortlieb panniers on the back, Banjo Brothers on the front. I toured over 500 miles on this rig (over several tours) before it got hit by a car.
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Tour Journals, Blog, ride pix
My bands:
Tour Journals, Blog, ride pix
My bands:
- Uke On! - ukulele duo - Videos
- Ukulele Abyss - ukulele cover videos - Videos
- Baroque and Hungry's (Celtic fusion) full-length studio album Mended.
- Artistic Differences - 8-track EP Dreams of Bile and Blood.
#67
Senior Member
Here's a before and after of Trek 830. Rear rack and fenders not shown.
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#68
Senior Member
[IMG][/IMG]
The one on the right is mine and its more of a Hybrid conversion (Giant FCR3).
The one on the left is my buddies mountain bike that originally had a suspension fork and such (Giant Rincon).
This is in Washington on our Vancouver to Tijuana tour!
The one on the right is mine and its more of a Hybrid conversion (Giant FCR3).
The one on the left is my buddies mountain bike that originally had a suspension fork and such (Giant Rincon).
This is in Washington on our Vancouver to Tijuana tour!
#69
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Hardrock
This is my 1991 Specialized Hardrock. I just finished modifying it. Installed cartridge type bottom bracket, semi-slick tires, Avenir rack, Avid V-brakes and levers, cyclocomputer, 100mm riser bars, Bontager saddle from my Trek road bike, (I may swap it for my Brooks B17), hitch skewer for my Nashbar BOB wannabe trailer, new cables and housings. I already had the fenders, the front brace was trashed, cut down to fit another bike, so I used one from an old Schwinn. I had the kickstand on the shelf already. Makes it much easier to park, and its weight is nothing compared to the other junk I carry.
I've only put about 65 miles on it, lightly loaded, but it's working fine so far, although I have to be careful to mount the panniers as far to the back as possible, for heel clearance.
I'd never ridden the Biopace chainrings before, and wondered how I'd like them. I really can't tell the difference. I think the 48 tooth front and the 11 tooth rear sprockets are going to be great on the downhills.
I've only put about 65 miles on it, lightly loaded, but it's working fine so far, although I have to be careful to mount the panniers as far to the back as possible, for heel clearance.
I'd never ridden the Biopace chainrings before, and wondered how I'd like them. I really can't tell the difference. I think the 48 tooth front and the 11 tooth rear sprockets are going to be great on the downhills.
Last edited by waldowales; 02-07-09 at 10:11 PM.
#70
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Thread Starter
Haha, so, Waldo, you finally drank the Brooks Kool Aid, eh? What finally convinced you to change and give it a shot? I have a champion flyer on my old Univega and love it.
New touring bike is on the way for me.
New touring bike is on the way for me.
Last edited by Aloyzius; 02-10-09 at 07:33 PM.
#71
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I'm building up a Bridgestone MB-4 for a Pan-Asian Silk Road tour. I just found a massive lugged crown touring fork with mid-fork eyelets, and my next step is to figure out handlebar setup. Drop bar? Trekking bar? Mountain drop (midge/dirtdrop)? H-bar? and then figure out if I want to go for a carrier rack or lowriders and a handlebar bag mounted on a second stem+chopped bar decaleur.
#72
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Bikes: Fuji Sunfire 1995, modified for touring
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Hi.
I've just finished my Winter build. I believe this is a 1997 Fuji Sunfire.
Before:
After:
I've gone with a 24 speed setup, because I wanted the stronger chain. I painted it the olive colour suggested by Boondock. I'm extremely happy with it so far. Shakedown tour next weekend.
I've just finished my Winter build. I believe this is a 1997 Fuji Sunfire.
Before:
After:
I've gone with a 24 speed setup, because I wanted the stronger chain. I painted it the olive colour suggested by Boondock. I'm extremely happy with it so far. Shakedown tour next weekend.
Last edited by ScruffyChimp; 03-22-09 at 03:20 PM.
#74
weirdo
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Dang it! I`ve been working on one for a while now too, and I wanted to wait until I had some pics from its first tour before posting here for show and tell, but I`m antsy. May as well put it up now.
Early 90s (I think) Schwinn Impact that I inherited after my uncle passed away. I kept the derailers, brake calipers, seatpost and BB. All the rest is boxed up in case, for whatever reason, I ever decide to restore it to how my uncle had it. The stuff I put on it is a combination of parts I bought new for the project and parts I had hanging around. I fabricated the rack, the adjustable stem, and some miscelaneous hardware myself. I want to build a nice set of touring racks for it, but that`s going to take time. So I can try it out on a few tours this summer, I ordered a generic rear rack that should be here any day now. Most of its use will probably be 20 to 50 mile day rides with four or five weekend tours per year and maybe a week long tour one of these summers.
Here are some pics of the progress. I have a full writeup on rbr:
https://forums.roadbikereview.com/sho...d.php?t=165377
Early 90s (I think) Schwinn Impact that I inherited after my uncle passed away. I kept the derailers, brake calipers, seatpost and BB. All the rest is boxed up in case, for whatever reason, I ever decide to restore it to how my uncle had it. The stuff I put on it is a combination of parts I bought new for the project and parts I had hanging around. I fabricated the rack, the adjustable stem, and some miscelaneous hardware myself. I want to build a nice set of touring racks for it, but that`s going to take time. So I can try it out on a few tours this summer, I ordered a generic rear rack that should be here any day now. Most of its use will probably be 20 to 50 mile day rides with four or five weekend tours per year and maybe a week long tour one of these summers.
Here are some pics of the progress. I have a full writeup on rbr:
https://forums.roadbikereview.com/sho...d.php?t=165377
Last edited by rodar y rodar; 03-22-09 at 05:43 PM.