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It's an original color. A friend of mine has a bike that looks just like that (but his isn't blurry), except in a womens' frame.
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Originally Posted by gna
(Post 12366650)
Us too. We melted some today, though.
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Originally Posted by JohnDThompson
(Post 12348054)
More a resurrection than a restoration...
I picked up a bare 1960s Raleigh Sports women's frame & fenders at ABCE last fall and have just finished building up as a campus bike for my daughter: http://www.os2.dhs.org/~john/frankenbike/completed.jpg Now we just need all that snow to melt. Is the rear rack original? If not what kind is it. It looks good. |
On the original Raleigh Sprort, the saddle bag has a leather patch with the two slots, located on the bottom of the bag. What is it forr?
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Originally Posted by Schwinnsta
(Post 12373391)
On the original Raleigh Sprort, the saddle bag has a leather patch with the two slots, located on the bottom of the bag. What is it forr?
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Originally Posted by sykerocker
(Post 12361836)
Finally! I haven't seen a Sports in that color since the one I owned back in 1973. Thank you. I was beginning to think it was a flashback from all the acid, and not grounded in reality.
Unfortunately I'm going to have to part with it. There's no Sports in my future. A 23" is just too small. http://gallery.me.com/justinhughes/1...12880457310001 http://gallery.me.com/justinhughes/1...12880456510001 Panaracer Col de la Vie tires rule. |
Originally Posted by ColonelJLloyd
(Post 12373655)
Here's mine. 1973 Sports in Ivory Glaze. The women's frame was available in this color for a few years, I believe. As was the 21" men's model. However, I think the 23" model was only available in this color in 1973, making it somewhat rare (as much as the ubiquitous Sports can be, I suppose).
Unfortunately I'm going to have to part with it. There's no Sports in my future. A 23" is just too small. That is a pretty bike... have never seen one in that colour in the wild and I live in Raleigh rich territory. |
Originally Posted by Sixty Fiver
(Post 12373661)
Guess you need a full size roadster then... :)
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Originally Posted by ColonelJLloyd
(Post 12373681)
Yeah, a 24" DL-1 would do, but I'm not crazy about a 40+ lb bike with rod brakes. It's just not something I need (as if that's the criterion I use with any bike purchase). I will probably build an approximation around a sport-touring road frame at some point.
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Here is a picture of the latest acquisition...
1973 Raleigh Colt step through for my bride, along with my 1972 Superbe. Aaron :) http://inlinethumb37.webshots.com/47...600x600Q85.jpg |
Originally Posted by wahoonc
(Post 12375004)
Here is a picture of the latest acquisition...
1973 Raleigh Colt step through for my bride, along with my 1972 Superbe. Aaron :) |
Originally Posted by Sixty Fiver
(Post 12375032)
You are a good husband.
Aaron:) |
I am putting the headset and the fork back together on my Superbe. Now I am curious if anyone of you would know the exact # of the loose ball bearings that go to the head tube cup and the fork crown race? I kind of tried it and #25 is the number I got.
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I seem to remember the number 24 but don't quote me on that. Fill it dry until you can't get any more in. If there isn't any significant rattle space between the balls then take one out. That's what I do.
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Sheldon says, "The headset uses 25 5/32 inch loose bearing balls in each race."
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Well, I've gotten my first email from the Lake Pepin crew about the ride - gotta say that I'm a bit more than excited about this. One thing though - the Phillips I have and was going to take (as the Lenton could use some more work) has a head lug that isn't completely filled. It's the top tube lug, and it's enough to catch a fingernail on the back side of the head tube.
Now, it's been like this. Probably since it was built in '68. No wobbles, no jiggles, no loose feeling, and for all intents and purposes, it doesn't affect the bike at all. I've ridden it probably 500 miles by now, and haven't encountered any expansion. Should I be concerned? I think I'm just being overly paranoid. |
Originally Posted by Amesja
(Post 12376184)
Sheldon says, "The headset uses 25 5/32 inch loose bearing balls in each race."
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Originally Posted by ahson
(Post 12377197)
Thanks! Gotta try it again today.
Only takes a few minutes this way. |
Justin, does it feel too small because of the short top tube? You have probably spent your whole adult life feeling cramped in many situations, and perhaps you get this feeling on that Sports. But it's really normal for us road riders when we jump on a Sports. The reach is extremely short. If that seat is adjusted to your height, then the bike isn't too small for you. And if you want, you can get a long-extension stem.
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Originally Posted by Sixty Fiver
(Post 12377376)
I start this with the bike upside down on the stand so I can load the bottom cup (use lots of grease) and then insert the fork, tie it in place and then flip the bike back to upright to load the top and finish the assembly.
Only takes a few minutes this way. I load the top/threaded race with grease and fill with bearings and screw that onto the fork from the bottom up until it seats as well. Only then do I crack the brake on the stand and rotate it back upright again to mess around with the headlight bracket, and necessary washer/shims, and the top locknut. The design of the Raleigh races allows this where a more-modern threaded headset cone won't always let you get away with this. Holding the fork with one hand while loading 25 bearings with the other is not the easiest way to do things. On a bike where I have no choice but to flip due to the shape of the top race being cone-shaped I use a bungie to hold the fork to the frame so that it doesn't fall out by gravity or need to be held constantly. That way I can use both hands to load the top bearings. Using caged bearings on the top race makes things a lot simpler here although I usually don't buy or use them unless they come with a new headset. I keep my bearings in little glass jars that artichoke hearts come in originally and try to always buy more before the jar gets fewer than 50 left. I put the new package of 144 inside the jar but don't open the little plastic envelope in so as not to mix different bearing batches although that really isn't that big of a deal with grade 300 cheap bicycle bearings... I use lots of grease too. A lot of grease pushes out when I assemble but it is easy to wipe off and clean and it's cheap. A big 16 oz. tub of Castrol #2 costs less than $5 at the auto parts store and lasts for years and years. I'm not worried about wasting it. |
Originally Posted by noglider
(Post 12377449)
Justin, does it feel too small because of the short top tube? You have probably spent your whole adult life feeling cramped in many situations, and perhaps you get this feeling on that Sports. But it's really normal for us road riders when we jump on a Sports. The reach is extremely short. If that seat is adjusted to your height, then the bike isn't too small for you. And if you want, you can get a long-extension stem.
The seat post as pictured is not quite high enough, but works for short rides. I'm not interested in modifying this beauty. It's just not right for me. I'd rather see it go to someone to whom it is better suited. 9-10 centimeters of stem showing is my limit. More than that and I personally feel that a bike looks bad. I'm pretty much a fistful of seat post guy too. |
Originally Posted by Amesja
(Post 12377501)
....rotate it back upright again to mess around with the headlight bracket, and necessary washer/shims, and the top locknut.
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ahson - There is usually some extra room between that locknut and the top race for a washer or light bracket.
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3 Attachment(s)
Is it Proper to post about 3+2 speeds here?
Just aquired 2 1967 Sprites - His & Hers. Had never seen these shift levers before, but they seem to be original. Downside is the men's bike has a crimp in the downtube. Someone hit something. Seems to ride ok, smooth, goes straight. Should I worry about it? |
Those are 5 speeds...and they are English so I guess you can put them here.;)
Nice find, those are not nearly as common as the regular 3 speeds. Aaron :) |
That bike is has quite the bend in it. I don't think it's about to fall apart at any second but it has to be felt a little bit as the steering geometry/rake has been modified quite a bit. I guess these bikes start with a pretty gentle steering angle to begin with so when a crash tightens it up a little the bike isn't too twitchy steering. Can you ride it no-handed and have it still track straight and not want to pull to one side or wobble? Then it is probably fine. I've seen much worse out there still riding around. I wouldn't ride it down mountains at break-neck speed unless you have a really strong neck...
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Aaron :) |
LOL. Pedal isn't bent, it's the crank.
This guy is on crack. |
I was looking at the sports i bought my wife and i noticed one of the lugs was not looking good, i know that the 70's raleigh's were not the best made, and im petty sure this bike hasn't been in a crash. im worried about the integrity of the frame.
http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h1...sor/image4.jpg http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h1...sor/image2.jpg http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h1...sor/image1.jpg http://i64.photobucket.com/albums/h1...sor/iamge3.jpg |
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