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Originally Posted by gster
(Post 21071212)
Q-?
Was Royal Scot a Raleigh sub brand? I.e. sold through hardware stores, dept stores etc? |
Originally Posted by BigChief
(Post 21071262)
Mine has a bike shop sticker from Wheel Goods Corp. Minneapolis . From what I understand, this was a large retailer. Raleigh may have made them especially for them.
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Yesterday, we travelled to Amsterdam to visit an art exhibition, but had a nice walk through the city as well.
As you will expect, I had one eye on the bicycles too ... :lol: I spotted only a handfull older cottered crank bikes among the thousands of bicycles that swarm the city. Most of the older ones, were from gazelle or Peugeot, but I also spotted these two 3-speeds : a seventies / eighties (?) Raleigh and a sixties or early seventies BSA. Sadly, there was no time to investigate further. My wife and one of our daughters were with me, so ... :twitchy: Peter https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...91ee7c397a.jpg |
Originally Posted by BigChief
(Post 21071262)
Mine has a bike shop sticker from Wheel Goods Corp. Minneapolis . From what I understand, this was a large retailer.
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NYC Century?
I notice several English 3 speed lovers live in the NYC area. Have any of you ridden your bike in the Transportation Alternatives Century? How did it go?
This year's event is on September 8. It's supposed to be the 30th and last. I'm thinking of the 50 mile route on my Raleigh Sports. Thanks, Ed |
Originally Posted by groth
(Post 21073647)
I notice several English 3 speed lovers live in the NYC area. Have any of you ridden your bike in the Transportation Alternatives Century? How did it go?
This year's event is on September 8. It's supposed to be the 30th and last. I'm thinking of the 50 mile route on my Raleigh Sports. Thanks, Ed |
Originally Posted by groth
(Post 21073647)
I notice several English 3 speed lovers live in the NYC area. Have any of you ridden your bike in the Transportation Alternatives Century? How did it go?
This year's event is on September 8. It's supposed to be the 30th and last. I'm thinking of the 50 mile route on my Raleigh Sports. Thanks, Ed |
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Originally Posted by groth
(Post 21073647)
I notice several English 3 speed lovers live in the NYC area. Have any of you ridden your bike in the Transportation Alternatives Century?...I'm thinking of the 50 mile route on my Raleigh Sports.
I think it's interesting that people will do things like ride single speeds, fixies, and even unicycles for these challenge events. But a three speed is "just impossible". https://live.staticflickr.com/4897/4...795bbd80_z.jpg |
Originally Posted by adventurepdx
(Post 21075405)
DO IT!
I think it's interesting that people will do things like ride single speeds, fixies, and even unicycles for these challenge events. But a three speed is "just impossible". https://live.staticflickr.com/4897/4...795bbd80_z.jpg https://i.postimg.cc/HW6QdSBZ/B89-EE...CC00162-C7.jpg |
Originally Posted by groth
(Post 21073647)
I notice several English 3 speed lovers live in the NYC area. Have any of you ridden your bike in the Transportation Alternatives Century? How did it go?
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^^Hm- There certainly seems to be some truth to this- I rode the Tour Divide in June, no-one around my town seems to care, only people that actually live on the route have any idea what that might entail.
But tell people that I ride the Lake Pepin 3-speed tour on a 1951 Humber and they are amazed. |
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Originally Posted by jackbombay
(Post 21075530)
Heh, when I was last in NYC I rode a century on my 3 speed dahon folding bike, it has 16" wheels, it was a tough century, those itty bitty wheels just don't really roll well even with 100 PSI in them and freshly rebuilt hubs.
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Originally Posted by Salubrious
(Post 21075534)
^^Hm- There certainly seems to be some truth to this- I rode the Tour Divide in June, no-one around my town seems to care, only people that actually live on the route have any idea what that might entail.
But tell people that I ride the Lake Pepin 3-speed tour on a 1951 Humber and they are amazed. https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...c628f67f53.jpg |
Originally Posted by paulb_in_bkln
(Post 21077569)
I have two much newer 20 inch wheel dahons. One day I'd like to get one of the original style 16 inchers.
https://richmond.craigslist.org/bik/...956155061.html Pair of dahon folding bikes - $100bicycle frame material: steelbicycle type: folding frame size: folding wheel size: 20 in Pair of older folding Dahon bikes. Great for the beach boardwalk. They both fit in the trunk of a Mazda Protege. Might need a little tlc as they haven't been used in a while. Only one shown but the other looks like it. $100 for the pair |
What's funny about doing serious miles on a three speed is that people these days think you can't do it, but back in the 30s three speeds were de rigueur. The most miles ridden on a bike in a single year was a record that was set on a three speed and stood for decades until the last year or two.
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Originally Posted by Salubrious
(Post 21078279)
The most miles ridden on a bike in a single year was a record that was set on a three speed and stood for decades until the last year or two.
A guy broke the record 4 or 5 years ago with 75,000 miles, and 2 years ago a woman broke the record setting it at 86,000 miles, BUT, she rode in circles around her house for a year, where the guy in 1935 toured around England on crap roads, on a 40 pound bike, and had to stop at police stations and doctors offices to get signatures from "distinguished gentlemen" to prove he was in the places he purported to have ridden his bike. Don't get me wrong, riding 12,000 laps of a 7 mile loop around your house every day for a year straight to set the current record takes some mental toughness, but it really is not in the spirit of the record, IMO of course. |
Originally Posted by jackbombay
(Post 21078743)
I did read an article about this recently, they guy rode half the year on some other bike, then got a different sponsor and rode the second half on a sturmey archer 4 speed. Rode 65,000 miles in a year IIRC, in 1935 I think it was, nuts.
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Originally Posted by jackbombay
(Post 21078743)
Don't get me wrong, riding 12,000 laps of a 7 mile loop around your house every day for a year straight to set the current record takes some mental toughness, but it really is not in the spirit of the record, IMO of course.
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Originally Posted by adventurepdx
(Post 21075405)
DO IT!
I think it's interesting that people will do things like ride single speeds, fixies, and even unicycles for these challenge events. But a three speed is "just impossible". https://live.staticflickr.com/4897/4...795bbd80_z.jpg Main commuter ride is my '72 Raleigh DL-1 Tourist. Backup (and primary ride to the one area with an extreme altitude change) is my '69 Raleigh Sprite. I usually don't find the first gear on the S5 too much of an advantage over low on the AW. Fifteen mile days running errands isn't exceptional. |
I've given up the car during the week and ride about 16 miles a day to and from work.
My bike of choice has been (mostly) my Robin Hood Semi with a '63 hub. It has a larger cog on the back (not sure which), new tires and pads. My only commuting complaint is other cyclists (inexperienced wobblers or Tour de France pretenders) and pedestrians on smart phones/ear buds walking out in front of you. https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...c0081a3c97.jpg GLS Goes Like Stink. |
Got my hands on a classic SA shifter. Don't really need it right now but it was cheap and in decent shape.
Any ideas how to best get this into even better shape? I'm thinking some rubbing with aluminum foil and a couple of baths in the ultrasonic cleaner? Perhaps use some rust treatment to get rid of some of the spots on here? Don't want to damage the chrome. http://i.imgur.com/Lw6udxF.jpg |
Originally Posted by adventurepdx
(Post 21075405)
DO IT!
I think it's interesting that people will do things like ride single speeds, fixies, and even unicycles for these challenge events. But a three speed is "just impossible". https://live.staticflickr.com/4897/4...795bbd80_z.jpg And yes, the fact that there are almost no hills in NYC (I know of Harlem Hill and bridge ramps) will certainly help! Looking forward to it! - Ed |
Originally Posted by JaccoW
(Post 21080469)
Got my hands on a classic SA shifter. Don't really need it right now but it was cheap and in decent shape.
Any ideas how to best get this into even better shape? I'm thinking some rubbing with aluminum foil and a couple of baths in the ultrasonic cleaner? Perhaps use some rust treatment to get rid of some of the spots on here? Don't want to damage the chrome. http://i.imgur.com/Lw6udxF.jpg |
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