What were some of the common 'trick' modifications to road bikes back in the 70s/80s?
#1
The Huffmeister
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: The Le Grande HQ
Posts: 3,132
Bikes: Gängl, Trek 938, Raleigh Professional, Paramount, Allez, Guerciotti, Specialized Stumpjumper, Trek 750, Miyata 1000 < Huffy
Liked 4,008 Times
in
1,618 Posts
What were some of the common 'trick' modifications to road bikes back in the 70s/80s?
Hey all!
As I am walking a fine line between trying to reduce the weight AND maintain some some semblence of 'period correct' for some of my vintage road bikes, I'd like to know more about what period changes or modifications were common or typical of race bikes, back when they were raced as new/nearly new.
Off-topic example: my dad used to have a 1969 Yamaha AT-1 enduro 125cc motorcycle when he was younger. Living in Southern California, he did all sorts of local racing back in the early 1970s. In order to make the bike more competitive, he modified the frame using a frame lowering kit that brought the engine down and improved the center of gravity, gave it a lighter weight flywheel, changed the fenders to alloy MX, a lighter exhaust pipe, etc. Possibly other modifications, like removing excess hardware not essential to racing. Bike was considered 'trick', and looked a lot like this one:
What would be the equivalent in the 'vintage road bike' world? I've seen lots of examples of drillium, so I know that was a thing. What else? I've heard of 'race day' mods like removing the hub grease and just using oil in the center port. What about part replacement? What types of parts and materials were swapped out? Was titanium even a thing back in the 1970s? What type of changes were made to the cutting edge legit TdF bikes from yesteryear? Or track bikes? I've seen that Panasonic with the exposed ball bearings in a bike article.
I'd like to make some changes, but it would be kinda cool if they were also period correct if possible.
We've got a host of forum members that were involved in either racing or bicycle mechanics from this era, and your thoughts and stories on this topic, as well as any pictorial examples, would prove highly interesting! Thanks!
As I am walking a fine line between trying to reduce the weight AND maintain some some semblence of 'period correct' for some of my vintage road bikes, I'd like to know more about what period changes or modifications were common or typical of race bikes, back when they were raced as new/nearly new.
Off-topic example: my dad used to have a 1969 Yamaha AT-1 enduro 125cc motorcycle when he was younger. Living in Southern California, he did all sorts of local racing back in the early 1970s. In order to make the bike more competitive, he modified the frame using a frame lowering kit that brought the engine down and improved the center of gravity, gave it a lighter weight flywheel, changed the fenders to alloy MX, a lighter exhaust pipe, etc. Possibly other modifications, like removing excess hardware not essential to racing. Bike was considered 'trick', and looked a lot like this one:
What would be the equivalent in the 'vintage road bike' world? I've seen lots of examples of drillium, so I know that was a thing. What else? I've heard of 'race day' mods like removing the hub grease and just using oil in the center port. What about part replacement? What types of parts and materials were swapped out? Was titanium even a thing back in the 1970s? What type of changes were made to the cutting edge legit TdF bikes from yesteryear? Or track bikes? I've seen that Panasonic with the exposed ball bearings in a bike article.
I'd like to make some changes, but it would be kinda cool if they were also period correct if possible.
We've got a host of forum members that were involved in either racing or bicycle mechanics from this era, and your thoughts and stories on this topic, as well as any pictorial examples, would prove highly interesting! Thanks!
__________________
There were 135 Confentes, but only one...Huffente!
There were 135 Confentes, but only one...Huffente!
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2023
Posts: 537
Bikes: Two Peter Mooney customs, a 1980 Trek 510 townie, a Marin Stelvio set up for TTs.
Liked 342 Times
in
186 Posts
I do think that Ti was a thing at least in the early eighties as there was a roadie in my area who ran a Ti BB spindle with his Super Record set-up. Bullseye Pulleys were another thing that showed up on some road bikes. I was too broke to afford any fun mods back then, and just keeping the bike on good sew-ups was enough of an expense..
Last edited by MooneyBloke; 12-22-23 at 12:19 PM. Reason: Fiix awful typos
Likes For MooneyBloke:
Likes For thinktubes:
#4
Senior Member
Titanium was in use to a limited degree with Campagnolo but they were limited, expensive and prone to fatigue cracks, Teledyne had a titanium frame road bike in and around 1973 -75 for instance, Bullseye alloy pulleys became a bit of a status part though not really any lighter but the anodized red finish added some bling. Lighter tubular tires of course.
There were not really any advances then that finally became available into the 1980's and beyond to truly reduce weight without losing strength and ultimately reliability. Using the best and lightest parts and thin wall tubing a road bike back then could weigh under 20 pounds which is still quite good.
There were not really any advances then that finally became available into the 1980's and beyond to truly reduce weight without losing strength and ultimately reliability. Using the best and lightest parts and thin wall tubing a road bike back then could weigh under 20 pounds which is still quite good.
#5
Senior Member
Top of the list was a race set of 'sprint's (aka: tubulars). Preference of silk$. Butted thin spokes, low count, many choices in weight weenie rims, alloy nipples.
Fasteners from Omas and Arnold Industries. The crank and stem bolt replacements in either titanium or aluminum alloy required first tightening the component with the steel bolt, then remove, install the lightweight goodies.
Also, lightweight CLB aluminum cables of which sacrificed or countered brake performance.
Fasteners from Omas and Arnold Industries. The crank and stem bolt replacements in either titanium or aluminum alloy required first tightening the component with the steel bolt, then remove, install the lightweight goodies.
Also, lightweight CLB aluminum cables of which sacrificed or countered brake performance.
Likes For chain_whipped:
#6
I can’t speak for the 1970s but in the 1980s…
- Cinelli 1/a steel expander bolt replaced with aluminium from 1/r
- short piece of dowelling into fork steerer to supposedly reduce brake shudder and/or for crown/steerer failure contingency
- Ill-advised tubular selection including Clement Campionissimo Seta Extra and Nuovo Super Seta Extra for road races on sketchy roads
- seat post cut short for minimum insertion into frame
- 2/3/4/5cm cut off end of handlebar drops
- aluminium crank arm attachment bolts requiring initial steel bolts to tighten before substitution
- Keywin pedals were everywhere in New Zealand in the mid-1980s, probably half the weight of Campagnolo Superleggera
- Modolo Kronos plastic time trial brake levers used on road bicycles. They were almost purely decorative.
- Ofmega Mistral plastic rear changers and shift levers.
- very occasionally a steel fork replaced with a Vitus 979 or SR Litage aluminium fork, although Alan/Vitus aluminium/Carbonio/Carbone 3 and 9 frames were pretty common.
By the 1980s there was only so much left to do because racing bicycles had largely evolved down to the bare minimum needed for functionality by then.
I did hear of racers removing a few loose bearings each from headsets, hubs and bottom brackets but never saw it first hand.
Good times.
- Cinelli 1/a steel expander bolt replaced with aluminium from 1/r
- short piece of dowelling into fork steerer to supposedly reduce brake shudder and/or for crown/steerer failure contingency
- Ill-advised tubular selection including Clement Campionissimo Seta Extra and Nuovo Super Seta Extra for road races on sketchy roads
- seat post cut short for minimum insertion into frame
- 2/3/4/5cm cut off end of handlebar drops
- aluminium crank arm attachment bolts requiring initial steel bolts to tighten before substitution
- Keywin pedals were everywhere in New Zealand in the mid-1980s, probably half the weight of Campagnolo Superleggera
- Modolo Kronos plastic time trial brake levers used on road bicycles. They were almost purely decorative.
- Ofmega Mistral plastic rear changers and shift levers.
- very occasionally a steel fork replaced with a Vitus 979 or SR Litage aluminium fork, although Alan/Vitus aluminium/Carbonio/Carbone 3 and 9 frames were pretty common.
By the 1980s there was only so much left to do because racing bicycles had largely evolved down to the bare minimum needed for functionality by then.
I did hear of racers removing a few loose bearings each from headsets, hubs and bottom brackets but never saw it first hand.
Good times.
__________________
Nothing quite says wall hanger like drillium toe straps
Nothing quite says wall hanger like drillium toe straps
Likes For seagrade:
#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 13,321
Bikes: (2) ti TiCycles, 2007 w/ triple and 2011 fixed, 1979 Peter Mooney, ~1983 Trek 420 now fixed and ~1973 Raleigh Carlton Competition gravel grinder
Liked 4,331 Times
in
2,788 Posts
I raced in the late '70s. We considered light weight stuff something to stay away from. Now, wheels were a different story. We all wanted the lightest rims and tires that 1) we could afford and 2) would reliably get us to the finish. Everyone rode tubulars, at least while racing. I had race wheels and training wheels light enough to club race and serve as spares in the bigger races. (I raced 290g rims, Clement Criterium Seta tires and the equivalent of DT Rev spokes at 145 pounds and was gentle on my wheels.) Everything else was stock or swapped out for better fit. Yes, I ran Bullseye pulleys because I had them already when I bought my race bike and there was no downside. Then forgot about them. And an Avocet III seat for the comfort on rough roads. (Light? Nice but not the reason.)
#8
Junior Member
Drillium
Drillium was the fad in my time, though of zero interest to me. Instructive is the drillium version of the Huret Jubilee rear derailleur- the standard version was actually lighter than the later drillium version!
Standard fad dynamics- mostly just looks cool. Often pointed out that the weight advantages of turning every component into Swiss cheese is a small fraction of the weight of a full water bottle...
Standard fad dynamics- mostly just looks cool. Often pointed out that the weight advantages of turning every component into Swiss cheese is a small fraction of the weight of a full water bottle...
#9
Stop reading my posts!
Leave off those crank dust caps: wow, SO much faster now! And the emergency crank swaps in the heat of a Crit are full mili-seconds quicker than before...
While at it lose the little threaded rings on Presta valves as well as those plastic caps (can you FEEL the speed picking up, now? YES!)
Drill out the hard plastic Unicanitor/Cinelli/Kashimax/BMX-y saddle (actually that did make them slightly more comfortable if only a fly-weight lighter)
Shortest possible cables and housing (another fly-weight of savings)
Smaller frame, taller seatpost and longer stem...Maybe more fashionable in the '80s when long seatposts could actually be found (and certainly not as sensible as riding a frame that FIT)
While at it lose the little threaded rings on Presta valves as well as those plastic caps (can you FEEL the speed picking up, now? YES!)
Drill out the hard plastic Unicanitor/Cinelli/Kashimax/BMX-y saddle (actually that did make them slightly more comfortable if only a fly-weight lighter)
Shortest possible cables and housing (another fly-weight of savings)
Smaller frame, taller seatpost and longer stem...Maybe more fashionable in the '80s when long seatposts could actually be found (and certainly not as sensible as riding a frame that FIT)
Likes For unworthy1:
#10
Cut the extra length off your seatpost. Alloy saddle rails. Alloy freewheel (Campy). Cello bar tape. Cut the ends of the bar drops off. Alloy chainring bolts.
Likes For Kontact:
#11
Full Member
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Marin County, Alta California
Posts: 401
Bikes: Since new: 86 Rodriguez Tandem, wife's 87 Gitane Team Pro, 92 Burley Rock-n-Roll, 85 Fisher Comp, 88 Puch Pro, two 92 Bridgestone X0-1s; later: 66/67 Gitane Champion du Monde, 70 Gitane Super Corsa, 70 Carre, 87 Gitane Team Pro, 77/78 Ritchey Tandem
Liked 389 Times
in
170 Posts
Well if you are thinking period correct for the 70s, then drillium would certainly be the choice…but by the 80s it had fallen out of favor. I recall somebody figured out that the minimal amount of weight savings couldn’t compensate for the increased wind resistance caused by all the little holes…basically it was a detrimental mod. But dang, some of the stuff was just so dang pretty and heck, if Eddy did it, then it must be worth having…I remember drilling my Universal brakes levers and Suntour bar ends…looked so *****’n to my teenage eyes!
#12
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Berkeley, CA
Posts: 7,381
Bikes: '72 Cilo Pacer, '72 Gitane Gran Tourisme, '72 Peugeot PX10, '73 Speedwell Ti, '74 Peugeot UE-8, '75 Peugeot PR-10L, '80 Colnago Super, '85 De Rosa Pro, '86 Look Equipe 753, '86 Look KG86, '89 Parkpre Team, '90 Parkpre Team MTB, '90 Merlin
Liked 2,683 Times
in
646 Posts
Into the 80s and the aero era…drilling holes in the bars for cables before grooved bars were common.
+1 to Bullseye pulleys and alloy/ti replacement bolts.
Banana stickers on the rim…maybe it was a SoCal thing.
Regina hollow-pin chains and alloy freewheels for race wheels.
+1 to Bullseye pulleys and alloy/ti replacement bolts.
Banana stickers on the rim…maybe it was a SoCal thing.
Regina hollow-pin chains and alloy freewheels for race wheels.
__________________
-Randy
'72 Cilo Pacer • '72 Peugeot PX10 • '73 Speedwell Ti • '74 Nishiki Competition • '74 Peugeot UE-8 • '86 Look Equipe 753 • '86 Look KG86 • '89 Parkpre Team Road • '90 Parkpre Team MTB • '90 Merlin Ti
Avatar photo courtesy of jeffveloart.com, contact: contact: jeffnil8 (at) gmail.com.
-Randy
'72 Cilo Pacer • '72 Peugeot PX10 • '73 Speedwell Ti • '74 Nishiki Competition • '74 Peugeot UE-8 • '86 Look Equipe 753 • '86 Look KG86 • '89 Parkpre Team Road • '90 Parkpre Team MTB • '90 Merlin Ti
Avatar photo courtesy of jeffveloart.com, contact: contact: jeffnil8 (at) gmail.com.
#13
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2019
Location: Santa Rosa, CA
Posts: 601
Bikes: Bianchi Campione d'Italia, Lemond Poprad, LeMond Victoire, Kona Hei Hei, Ritchey Ultra, Schwinn "Paramount" PDG, incoming Mercian rando by Gugie
Liked 406 Times
in
259 Posts
Mid-80's: American Classic seatposts (and bottle cages?), Bullseye pulleys, Bullseye or Phil Wood hubs, or Hi-e if you could find them. Some guys in my club ran 48-spoke hubs and rims but then only laced up every other hole, making them pre-drilled 24-spoke wheels. 54x14 junior gearing. Or was it 54x15?
Likes For mhespenheide:
#14
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 13,502
Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
Liked 6,806 Times
in
3,890 Posts
#15
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 13,502
Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
Liked 6,806 Times
in
3,890 Posts
#16
Senior Member
Aluminium toe-clips.
(crop from https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-v...teel-ones.html; still have them...)
(crop from https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-v...teel-ones.html; still have them...)
Likes For oneclick:
#17
Edumacator
Join Date: Jan 2018
Location: Goose Creek, SC
Posts: 7,560
Bikes: '87 Crestdale, '87 Basso Gap, '92 Rossin Performance EL-OS, 1990 VanTuyl, 1980s Losa, 1985 Trek 670, 1982 AD SLE, 1987 PX10, etc...
Liked 3,590 Times
in
2,254 Posts
From a Huffente standpoint, your best bet is the saddle, stem, bars, cables, tires, wheels and pedals.
A modern ultra light saddle will shave a bundle.
Drilled chains were a thing if I recall...
A modern ultra light saddle will shave a bundle.
Drilled chains were a thing if I recall...
__________________
1987 Crest Cannondale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin Performance EL, 1990ish Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Competition, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 Cannondale M500, 1984 Mercian, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi (model unknown), 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super, 1971 Raleigh International, 1998 Corratec Ap & Dun, 1991 Peugeot Slimestone
1987 Crest Cannondale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin Performance EL, 1990ish Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Competition, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 Cannondale M500, 1984 Mercian, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi (model unknown), 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super, 1971 Raleigh International, 1998 Corratec Ap & Dun, 1991 Peugeot Slimestone
#18
^ * * ^ * * ^
Join Date: May 2014
Location: FL USA
Posts: 165
Bikes: 1977 Tom Kellogg Nr. 27 - 1984 Bob Jackson - 1987 Alpineer - 1999 Bianchi - 2002 LeMond Buenos Aries- 2007 Specialized Tarmac Pro - 2017 Mongoose Argus Comp FatBike - 2024 Gravity 29er 1-Speed Monstercross
Liked 297 Times
in
94 Posts
Titanium components from Pino Morroni. I had his quick-release skewers on my Assenmacher late 70s. Interesting article here: TheRetroGrouch - Pino
Also, Modolo had carbon fiber downtube shifter levers available in 1980. There was much confusion about these, many believing they were plastic (which technically I suppose they were) and would surely break. I used them for years with no problem although I never cared for the curved design.
Tied & soldered spokes were common.
Lightened shifters. These were mine. The other broke
Also, Modolo had carbon fiber downtube shifter levers available in 1980. There was much confusion about these, many believing they were plastic (which technically I suppose they were) and would surely break. I used them for years with no problem although I never cared for the curved design.
Tied & soldered spokes were common.
Lightened shifters. These were mine. The other broke
Last edited by cegerer; 12-22-23 at 08:05 AM.
#19
^ * * ^ * * ^
Join Date: May 2014
Location: FL USA
Posts: 165
Bikes: 1977 Tom Kellogg Nr. 27 - 1984 Bob Jackson - 1987 Alpineer - 1999 Bianchi - 2002 LeMond Buenos Aries- 2007 Specialized Tarmac Pro - 2017 Mongoose Argus Comp FatBike - 2024 Gravity 29er 1-Speed Monstercross
Liked 297 Times
in
94 Posts
Another really common modification was to replace the steel crank fixing bolts and the chainring bolts with anodized aluminum pieces. Same for most steel bolts anywhere on the bike.
And, of course, never ever under any circumstances does one use the plastic caps on their presta valves - 1. added weight, and 2: removing the cap uses up valuable time if you need to air up or repair a flat during the race!
And, of course, never ever under any circumstances does one use the plastic caps on their presta valves - 1. added weight, and 2: removing the cap uses up valuable time if you need to air up or repair a flat during the race!
Last edited by cegerer; 12-22-23 at 08:16 AM.
#20
Senior Member
Most of us who were actively riding back then weren’t racing. In 1986, I built my first wheel: a tubular rim laced to a Sturmey-Archer 3-speed hub, which I used to commute to my job at the bike shop, as well as to leave at the Menlo Park, CA, Caltrain station for my commute to San Jose, where I went to grad school. I had various cheap bikes stashed at that train station, and learned that bike thieves will steal something cheap if you use a cheap lock. I don’t remember the frame I mounted that wheel to, but I did have a Trek 412, which I purchased new from Palo Alto Bicycles in Dec 1982 to use for road riding. I don’t recall changing any of the stock components on that bike; they all worked well enough for my purposes, and by 1984 I wasn’t riding it much as I had had a head-on collision with another cyclist on Stanford’s campus which bent the top and downtube. It didn’t handle very well after that (and was eventually stolen at the MP Caltrain station).
Likes For nlerner:
#21
The Huffmeister
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: The Le Grande HQ
Posts: 3,132
Bikes: Gängl, Trek 938, Raleigh Professional, Paramount, Allez, Guerciotti, Specialized Stumpjumper, Trek 750, Miyata 1000 < Huffy
Liked 4,008 Times
in
1,618 Posts
I want to take a moment and thank everyone for your replies - this is turning into a fun thread! My hope is that some of these thoughts, ideas, and habits from yesteryear can be preserved for history's sake. It's always fun to recall how people used to do things when.
Trust me...I've gone back and forth on the saddle! The thing probably weighs 500+ grams and I'd easily be able to shave the better half of a pound off the bike if I went with something lighter, but...I want the bike to look ace! Because the leather saddle is so well loved, seeing it on a bike like this helps w/ the shock value. What I was thinking was somewhere in the middle - keeping a leather saddle, but going with a more lightweight option. A Berthoud Galibier saddle is about 360g, which would shave 150g off easily, and still looks awesome. It solves the one problem of the weight, but creates another - now my saddle costs 10 times what the bike is worth
I'm getting some great ideas from others in this thread. Keep the thoughts/ideas/memories rolling!
Trust me...I've gone back and forth on the saddle! The thing probably weighs 500+ grams and I'd easily be able to shave the better half of a pound off the bike if I went with something lighter, but...I want the bike to look ace! Because the leather saddle is so well loved, seeing it on a bike like this helps w/ the shock value. What I was thinking was somewhere in the middle - keeping a leather saddle, but going with a more lightweight option. A Berthoud Galibier saddle is about 360g, which would shave 150g off easily, and still looks awesome. It solves the one problem of the weight, but creates another - now my saddle costs 10 times what the bike is worth
I'm getting some great ideas from others in this thread. Keep the thoughts/ideas/memories rolling!
__________________
There were 135 Confentes, but only one...Huffente!
There were 135 Confentes, but only one...Huffente!
#22
The Huffmeister
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: The Le Grande HQ
Posts: 3,132
Bikes: Gängl, Trek 938, Raleigh Professional, Paramount, Allez, Guerciotti, Specialized Stumpjumper, Trek 750, Miyata 1000 < Huffy
Liked 4,008 Times
in
1,618 Posts
#23
Senior Member
Anything Hi-E.
Someone mentioned replacing the Cinelli 1A steel steerer bolt with the aluminum 1R bolt. I hope people knew enough to tighten the expander wedge with the steel bolt and then insert the aluminum bolt to secure the wedge in place.
A friend of mine had his 1R bolt snap while riding. He was able to slow to where he was able to take a safe tumble off the bike, but I imagine not everyone was that skilled or lucky.
Don't remember if they were lighter, but O.F. Mega sold their Mistral plastic shifters and rear derailleurs for a while in the 1980's:
Someone mentioned replacing the Cinelli 1A steel steerer bolt with the aluminum 1R bolt. I hope people knew enough to tighten the expander wedge with the steel bolt and then insert the aluminum bolt to secure the wedge in place.
A friend of mine had his 1R bolt snap while riding. He was able to slow to where he was able to take a safe tumble off the bike, but I imagine not everyone was that skilled or lucky.
Don't remember if they were lighter, but O.F. Mega sold their Mistral plastic shifters and rear derailleurs for a while in the 1980's:
#24
Back then I really wasn't doing different than most of today's builds. Moderate upgrades continuously. On the used Schwinn Suberban, my parents gave me 1978 Christmas. First my dad converted the upright bars to Varsity drop bars. Things like the Alvit was replaced with Suntour 7. At this time 1981 I found a set of Campy high flange on Mavic sewup. Unfortunately these were never used by me and were stolen by a high school chum I thought was a friend. The steel wheels were replaced with Arraya with Specialized High Pressure tires, steel handlebars were replaced with alloy.
Consistancely was Frankenstein, lol, of course the Schwinn frame was swapped for a Peugeot, the uo8. The Suntour 7 got swapped for a Steel GT, the steel GT gave way to the VGT. The VGT broke so I down graded to the long cage Suntour Honor (Super Studly this was my best of the era).
Here is when I frame swapped to a Falcon, and started to learn the difference of bottom bracket threading. That was learning the hard way, lol. By this time I think all my parts were now alloy, except for the cranks. The Falcon was robins egg blue and I junked all simplex to install my Suntour. I think went the Mafac over the Weinman.
I had for a while until I bought a Raleigh Tourist. Man that was nice, but really small. That bike had Stronglight cranks with the big pant guard, it had Maillard 700 hubs on alloy Rigida 27", SR Royal post, with first gen Gran Compe side pull with the matching adjustable levers, it had the Brooks professional, and Atom 700 pedals, with Huret Jubilee shifters and derailleurs. Oh my gosh that was a nice bike!
Its about here that ended up with my brothers neglected RedRodriguez, actually everything I got for the Schwinn on forward to here was hand me down from the bro. Again a frameswap!
I used the Rodriguez for thousands of miles and never did any other changes. I did a couple of rattle can paint jobs on it. First to gold and then to the red and black metallic fade, but I wouldn't call those up grades.
My brother has passed, I still have the Rod. Now built up with Shimano 600 and Weinman sidepulls.
Consistancely was Frankenstein, lol, of course the Schwinn frame was swapped for a Peugeot, the uo8. The Suntour 7 got swapped for a Steel GT, the steel GT gave way to the VGT. The VGT broke so I down graded to the long cage Suntour Honor (Super Studly this was my best of the era).
Here is when I frame swapped to a Falcon, and started to learn the difference of bottom bracket threading. That was learning the hard way, lol. By this time I think all my parts were now alloy, except for the cranks. The Falcon was robins egg blue and I junked all simplex to install my Suntour. I think went the Mafac over the Weinman.
I had for a while until I bought a Raleigh Tourist. Man that was nice, but really small. That bike had Stronglight cranks with the big pant guard, it had Maillard 700 hubs on alloy Rigida 27", SR Royal post, with first gen Gran Compe side pull with the matching adjustable levers, it had the Brooks professional, and Atom 700 pedals, with Huret Jubilee shifters and derailleurs. Oh my gosh that was a nice bike!
Its about here that ended up with my brothers neglected RedRodriguez, actually everything I got for the Schwinn on forward to here was hand me down from the bro. Again a frameswap!
I used the Rodriguez for thousands of miles and never did any other changes. I did a couple of rattle can paint jobs on it. First to gold and then to the red and black metallic fade, but I wouldn't call those up grades.
My brother has passed, I still have the Rod. Now built up with Shimano 600 and Weinman sidepulls.
#25
señor miembro
Join Date: Dec 2018
Location: Pac NW
Posts: 6,837
Bikes: '70s - '80s Campagnolo
Liked 6,970 Times
in
3,439 Posts
Likes For SurferRosa: