My 1986 Dahon
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My 1986 Dahon
Hello!
I've had this bike for about 12 years or so, I've ridden it over much of the US, and will soon be working in NYC for a bit and will have this bike with me for transportation!
I did just disassemble clean and oil the 3 speed hub, pulled the cranks and removed the BB and cleaned all the dry old grease out and repacked with clean fresh grease.
The bike is riding pretty nice right now!
One piece that would be nice to replace is the plastic grommet that is at the top of the stem that the folding diagonal brace attaches to, its is a bit loose and over rough surfaces it certainly rattles a fair bit, does dahon sell these? heh....
At any rate here is a pic of my bike, I do have new tires coming for it which I'll instal before I leave for the big city...
I've had this bike for about 12 years or so, I've ridden it over much of the US, and will soon be working in NYC for a bit and will have this bike with me for transportation!
I did just disassemble clean and oil the 3 speed hub, pulled the cranks and removed the BB and cleaned all the dry old grease out and repacked with clean fresh grease.
The bike is riding pretty nice right now!
One piece that would be nice to replace is the plastic grommet that is at the top of the stem that the folding diagonal brace attaches to, its is a bit loose and over rough surfaces it certainly rattles a fair bit, does dahon sell these? heh....
At any rate here is a pic of my bike, I do have new tires coming for it which I'll instal before I leave for the big city...
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#2
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I’d wait until you come to NYC before investing any money in this. The Citibike bike share program has very good coverage and you may find yourself using your dahon much less than you thought. Member ship is only ~$180 a year or so, so about the cost of a tune up or some repairs. Also the bikes are heavy tanks so they are great for challenging excercise!
Also, are those 16” wheels? There are potholes here that will literally eat that bike. I do see lots of people on small wheeled bikes like bromptons but in my opinion 20” is the smallest you should go.
Also, are those 16” wheels? There are potholes here that will literally eat that bike. I do see lots of people on small wheeled bikes like bromptons but in my opinion 20” is the smallest you should go.
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I like to build memories with my bikes, I been so many places with this bike, it makes it special to me, it gives the bike soul, that I have so many memories with it. This is my Dahon, there aren't many like it, but this one is mine :-)
I've biked around NYC a fair bit a few years back, 1000 miles in a couple of months, so I know what I'm getting into, plus I'm an old BMX rat so I can bunny hop this bike as needed to deal with potholes.
They are 16" wheels, with 165mm cranks to boot, cue the circus music!
This bike does weigh in at ~27 pounds so it's a fair bit of exercise too!
I've biked around NYC a fair bit a few years back, 1000 miles in a couple of months, so I know what I'm getting into, plus I'm an old BMX rat so I can bunny hop this bike as needed to deal with potholes.
They are 16" wheels, with 165mm cranks to boot, cue the circus music!
This bike does weigh in at ~27 pounds so it's a fair bit of exercise too!
#4
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Fair enough, with regards to parts, many on this forum recommend calling ThorUSA (online dealer based in California). If you wait until you get to NYC, there are a lot of bike shops that service Dahons, although Franks bikes shop might be the best since there were probably the only one in business in 1986. The place is a bit of a mess and it honestly wouldn’t surprise me if they had a bike similiar to yours buried somewhere. Spokesmen cycles has several locations and also services Dahons. I use them as I live near one and found the are usually pretty good, with reasonable prices for the nieborhood.
#5
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You Sir, have a classic! +1 to bike memories. Good luck with the move to NYC. Let us know how you and the Dahon are doing.
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Thanks for the info:-)
I'll just be out there working, not moving there, but I plan on putting down some decent rides on the Dahon while I am out there, I'll post some pics up when I do!
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IIRC Dahon said they no longer have spares for these 33 y.o. bikes, but you could always check with He-who-must-not-be-named-on-this-forum (ThorUSA).
That said there's a huge worldwide following for these bikes - check the Dahon owner's Facebook page (that's 'Dahon' - the official company Facebook page is 'Dahon Folding Bikes'). Owners are always showing off restored or hot-rodded Classics. Someone might have a stash of parts, or could be 3D printing replacements.
Top recommended mod: aluminum rims and Marathon tires.
That said there's a huge worldwide following for these bikes - check the Dahon owner's Facebook page (that's 'Dahon' - the official company Facebook page is 'Dahon Folding Bikes'). Owners are always showing off restored or hot-rodded Classics. Someone might have a stash of parts, or could be 3D printing replacements.
Top recommended mod: aluminum rims and Marathon tires.
Last edited by tcs; 06-12-19 at 02:45 PM.
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That said there's a huge worldwide following for these bikes - check the Dahon owner's Facebook page (that's 'Dahon' - the official company Facebook page is 'Dahon Folding Bikes'). Owners are always showing off restored or hot-rodded Classics. Someone might have a stash of parts, or could be 3D printing replacements.
I have made some cool functional mods to mine that I'll post up when I get a bit more time.
I have some high pressure tires on there and I did score an aluminum front rim for cheap from a bike shop about 8 years ago, nice to lose a bit of weight and get much better braking, especially in the wet.
Do you guys buy 16" rims and the appropriate shorter spokes and just relace the existing 28 hole hub? I've built plenty of wheels over the years so its not an issue, but it seems like it would get a bit spendy, does anyone sell a kit for this? A rim with the appropriate spokes?
Is that your ride?!?!
Nice one either way!
I got mine without the rear fender unfortunately, but I can add some plastic to the rack to keep water off me, but I suppose I should search Ebay to see whats out there too.
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It looks like the marathons are rated to 70 PSI, but as so much of the riders weight is right over the rear axle on these bikes I like to run the rear pretty hard so the bike rolls decently, I've found that 85-90 PSI seems to still be comfy, but I can cover ground decently.
The tires I have coming are rated to 100 PSI, the KENDA KWEST 16X1.5 K193-2 black bike 100 PSI, here is a link, https://www.ebay.com/itm/372586676997
The tires I have coming are rated to 100 PSI, the KENDA KWEST 16X1.5 K193-2 black bike 100 PSI, here is a link, https://www.ebay.com/itm/372586676997
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Do you guys buy 16" rims and the appropriate shorter spokes and just relace the existing 28 hole hub? I've built plenty of wheels over the years so its not an issue, but it seems like it would get a bit spendy, does anyone sell a kit for this? A rim with the appropriate spokes?
Is that your ride?
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Huh, I haven't seen ERD specs on many of the 16" rims so I figured I would have to buy one, measure it, then buy the appropriate spokes, but single wall rims take a lot of the variability of ERD out of the equation. I'll have to give it a shot!
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Ok, spent a while on my folding bike, first off the seat tube angle is super bad, measures at 70* AND the BB is on the front side of the seat tube so the "actual" is even worse, so I moved the seat WAY forward, now the "actual" seat tube angle is 73*, sweet.
I also replaced the rear brake cable and housing, the shift cable and housing, and put a new shifter on, well, its old, but in very good condition, and I put some new rubber on, rated to 100 PSI, the thing does seem to roll somewhat better with 95 PSI in the rear, but I don't expect too much out of the 16" wheels in that regard. The front brake was actually kinda FUBAR'd but I had parts I robbed from another caliper brake in a parts box to get it tip top, put some kool-stop pads in it too, much better braking now, also new pads in the rear.
I also pulled the 165mm steel cranks off and replaced them with 175mm MTB cranks, the bad seat angle plus the short cranks was a really bad combo, I'm stoked to get both of those sorted! But I needed a longer BB spindle to make that work, and I had several to choose from, I have great chain line now, and I lost nearly a pound off the bike with the crank swap, BUT I will have to pull the drive side pedal when I fold the bike now as the original crank did fold to deal with the pedal, but that crank was also bent slightly so going to the MTB cranks got rid of that slight bend as well :-) I might pick up some folding pedals at some point.
I did go back to a 46 tooth ring and I think that will work well all in all, it's also in notably better shape than the 48 I had on there for yesterday's ride...
I'll get some better pics soon.
I also replaced the rear brake cable and housing, the shift cable and housing, and put a new shifter on, well, its old, but in very good condition, and I put some new rubber on, rated to 100 PSI, the thing does seem to roll somewhat better with 95 PSI in the rear, but I don't expect too much out of the 16" wheels in that regard. The front brake was actually kinda FUBAR'd but I had parts I robbed from another caliper brake in a parts box to get it tip top, put some kool-stop pads in it too, much better braking now, also new pads in the rear.
I also pulled the 165mm steel cranks off and replaced them with 175mm MTB cranks, the bad seat angle plus the short cranks was a really bad combo, I'm stoked to get both of those sorted! But I needed a longer BB spindle to make that work, and I had several to choose from, I have great chain line now, and I lost nearly a pound off the bike with the crank swap, BUT I will have to pull the drive side pedal when I fold the bike now as the original crank did fold to deal with the pedal, but that crank was also bent slightly so going to the MTB cranks got rid of that slight bend as well :-) I might pick up some folding pedals at some point.
I did go back to a 46 tooth ring and I think that will work well all in all, it's also in notably better shape than the 48 I had on there for yesterday's ride...
I'll get some better pics soon.
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Upgrades worthwhile? These little guys are heavy, but 30+ years on still one of the smallest folds available.
MKs offers many styles. The 'EZY' and 'EZY Superior' ranges are not cross compatible.
Folding, I'd take the RH pedal off and secure it under the rack's springbar.
Folding, I'd take the RH pedal off and secure it under the rack's springbar.
Last edited by tcs; 06-14-19 at 10:08 AM.
#16
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Make your own, use shoe goo
Make your own, use shoe goo
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I made a box from 1/4" plywood to hold my backpack on the rack so I can stay a little cooler while riding around NYC.
Just one screw to hold it to the rack with a piece of plywood glued and nailed to the bottom of the box to keep it from moving. I did weld a fender washer to the back of the rack for this to work, works great, I'm looking forward to a non sweaty back while biking to and from work!
Just one screw to hold it to the rack with a piece of plywood glued and nailed to the bottom of the box to keep it from moving. I did weld a fender washer to the back of the rack for this to work, works great, I'm looking forward to a non sweaty back while biking to and from work!
#19
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I asked him about this one time and it his procedure is to over apply shoe goo than drill it out.
I did it once and it worked well. Shoe goo when dry is tough stiff rubbery. I think those are the properties you want.
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Oh man, my bike commute for the next few weeks is going to be great, almost all of it is on the "south county trailway, a paved rails to trails pathway, no cars, totally shaded by trees, and this path goes very far north too, lots of pedalling to mess around with!