Westminster Bike Swap 2022 - 2/13
#2
Senior Member
Hello, live close you should go once and decide for yourself. It is a real circus, A game approach attitude. As far as vintage parts go, all hit or miss, Do It!!
#3
Senior Member
Swap:
As big as some years have been, with the mask Covid thing, the show would be a lot more enjoyable if it would be two days. I am learning first hand, that getting parts to build a vintage bike when you want to sell the stuff you did not need for that build, with the shipping costs I am on the losing end. I have realized, that is the price of cycling hobby, and I am ok, with that!
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Ashland, VA
Posts: 4,420
Bikes: The keepers: 1958 Raleigh Lenton Grand Prix, 1968 Ranger, 1969 Magneet Sprint, 1971 Gitane Tour de France, 1973 Raleigh Tourist, 3 - 1986 Rossins, and a '77 PX-10 frame in process.
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Definitely attending, have a table with Poguemahone, and will be taking three bikes for sale: 1955 Royal Enfield 3-speed, 1970 AMF Roadmaster middleweight, and a 1920's-something Emblem girl's bike. It's looking pretty hopeful for this year, seeing 2020 just squeaked the COVID wire, and I passed on last year (which I understand was poorly attended).
Masks will be mandatory to get in, no matter what your vaccination status.
Masks will be mandatory to get in, no matter what your vaccination status.
__________________
Syke
“No one in this world, so far as I know — and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office thereby.”
H.L. Mencken, (1926)
Syke
“No one in this world, so far as I know — and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office thereby.”
H.L. Mencken, (1926)
Last edited by sykerocker; 02-15-22 at 06:15 PM.
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#5
surly old man
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Carlisle, PA
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Bikes: IRO Mark V, Karate Monkey half fat, Trek 620 IGH, Cannondale 26/24 MTB, Amp Research B3, and more.
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I will be there.
Jim
Jim
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Cross Check Nexus7, IRO Mark V, Trek 620 Nexus7, Karate Monkey half fat, IRO Model 19 fixed, Amp Research B3, Surly 1x1 half fat fixed, and more...
--------------------------
SB forever
Cross Check Nexus7, IRO Mark V, Trek 620 Nexus7, Karate Monkey half fat, IRO Model 19 fixed, Amp Research B3, Surly 1x1 half fat fixed, and more...
--------------------------
SB forever
#6
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Baltimore MD
Posts: 3,335
Bikes: '72 Motobecane Grand Record, '72 Gitane tandem, '72 Raleigh Super Course, '73 Raleigh Gran Sport, '73 Colnago Super, '76 Fiorelli Coppi, '78 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro, '78 Trek 930, '81 Holdsworth Special 650B, '86 Masi GC, ’94 Bridgestone RB-T
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I'll be there. I may bring a couple bikes to sell. We should figure out a way to ID Bikeforums members. Maybe a little sign for tables?
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The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
#7
Monkey Boy
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Herndon, VA
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Bikes: '22 Surly Straggler, '15 Breezer Downtown EX, '19 Motobecane Record (fixie)
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If you're making the trek to Westminster and you like Ice Cream, I have to recommend Hoffman's Ice Cream & Deli (which is not far from the farm museum / fairgrounds). I grew up in the area and spend a good bit of time as a mechanic on Main Street at White's Bikes, so I have to recommend them as well. But definitely check out Hoffman's, your tummy will thank me!
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Artist | Musician | Bass Player
Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans. (o.o)
Artist | Musician | Bass Player
Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans. (o.o)
#8
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Baltimore MD
Posts: 3,335
Bikes: '72 Motobecane Grand Record, '72 Gitane tandem, '72 Raleigh Super Course, '73 Raleigh Gran Sport, '73 Colnago Super, '76 Fiorelli Coppi, '78 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro, '78 Trek 930, '81 Holdsworth Special 650B, '86 Masi GC, ’94 Bridgestone RB-T
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So who went? I had a decent day - sold a bike, and bought some stuff I did and didn't need.
__________________
The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
#9
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#10
Senior Member
Given that I drove an hour & a half in a driving snow . . but the roads were still warm so the roads stay safe.
I skipped last year, both over weather and the pandemic. Had to go just to check in with a handful of old friends.
I did get a couple small things: A Phil Wood front hub, NOS, for $30. Two Cinelli stems, one NOS @ 90mm, the other light used @ 110mm, for combined $50.
Some tubes and lubes. A funny thing called a "Cable Luber - A Power Injection Tool". It was free.
And, totally cool, a true unobtanium bit, a Zeus pedal wrench. Unmarked, but with a bunch of other Zeus tools. And it does fit. (I have two bikes w/ Zeus pedals.)
A photo of it, just for entertainment purposes.
Zeus, and it fits. It also weighs about 3x time any other pedal wrench known.
Slightly not-round, and cerated edges only up top. Works flawlessly on Zeus pedals.
Anyway, the Westminster Swap is a fine and well-run event. Definitely worth the effort to get there!
And cheers to the friends I did see, and apologies to those missed.
Owen
I skipped last year, both over weather and the pandemic. Had to go just to check in with a handful of old friends.
I did get a couple small things: A Phil Wood front hub, NOS, for $30. Two Cinelli stems, one NOS @ 90mm, the other light used @ 110mm, for combined $50.
Some tubes and lubes. A funny thing called a "Cable Luber - A Power Injection Tool". It was free.
And, totally cool, a true unobtanium bit, a Zeus pedal wrench. Unmarked, but with a bunch of other Zeus tools. And it does fit. (I have two bikes w/ Zeus pedals.)
A photo of it, just for entertainment purposes.
Zeus, and it fits. It also weighs about 3x time any other pedal wrench known.
Slightly not-round, and cerated edges only up top. Works flawlessly on Zeus pedals.
Anyway, the Westminster Swap is a fine and well-run event. Definitely worth the effort to get there!
And cheers to the friends I did see, and apologies to those missed.
Owen
__________________
1959 Hilton Wrigley Connoisseur (my favorite!)
1963 Hetchins Mountain King
1971 Gitane Tour de France (original owner)
* 1971 Gitane Super Corsa (crashed)
* rebuilt as upright cruiser
1971 Gitane Super Corsa #2 (sweet replacement)
1980 Ritchey Road Touring (The Grail Bike)
1982 Tom Ritchey Everest
(replacing stolen 1981 TR Everest custom)
1982 Tom Ritchey McKinley (touring pickup truck)
1985 ALAN Record (Glued & Screwed. A gift.)
1959 Hilton Wrigley Connoisseur (my favorite!)
1963 Hetchins Mountain King
1971 Gitane Tour de France (original owner)
* 1971 Gitane Super Corsa (crashed)
* rebuilt as upright cruiser
1971 Gitane Super Corsa #2 (sweet replacement)
1980 Ritchey Road Touring (The Grail Bike)
1982 Tom Ritchey Everest
(replacing stolen 1981 TR Everest custom)
1982 Tom Ritchey McKinley (touring pickup truck)
1985 ALAN Record (Glued & Screwed. A gift.)
#11
Senior Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Ashland, VA
Posts: 4,420
Bikes: The keepers: 1958 Raleigh Lenton Grand Prix, 1968 Ranger, 1969 Magneet Sprint, 1971 Gitane Tour de France, 1973 Raleigh Tourist, 3 - 1986 Rossins, and a '77 PX-10 frame in process.
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Not a bad day for Poguemahone and myself. I sold one bike (the 70 AMF Roadmaster), brought the 55 Royal Enfield back home. There was a guy there with a couple of 23" frame Raleigh Sports and Humbers, for decent prices, but I had to move two bikes to have room to take a new one home.
For me, it was wheels day. Picked up three sets, a 27" wheels on 126mm Shimano hubs which will finally give my "baseball bike" (a stripped single speed on a BCA frame - my commuter to the ballpark for Richmond Flying Squirrels games) a proper set of wheels, not the mismatched junk left over from the fire that I built it with, a set of blade spoked 700c clincher/freehub wheels which will go on my 92 Diamondback Expert (my only 'modern' bike) since the freehub on the stock set of wheels has died, and a set of carbon fiber aero sewup wheels which I'm not sure what I'm going to do with them (summer use on the Diamondback?), but they were in nice condition and cheeeeeeep! And a Campagnolo aero bottle and cage for my third Rossin. And I came home with eight free sewups, of which six look like they're going to be useful.
Turnout was definitely not up to two years ago. The couple of guys I normally see who deal in 20's and earlier American bikes weren't there this year (so much for my plans on offloading the third bike), merchant count felt lighter, the bicycle corral was definitely half of what it usually was, and the place was nowhere near as crowded as past years. Hell, I never had to wait in line for a urinal in the men's room this time.
For me, it was wheels day. Picked up three sets, a 27" wheels on 126mm Shimano hubs which will finally give my "baseball bike" (a stripped single speed on a BCA frame - my commuter to the ballpark for Richmond Flying Squirrels games) a proper set of wheels, not the mismatched junk left over from the fire that I built it with, a set of blade spoked 700c clincher/freehub wheels which will go on my 92 Diamondback Expert (my only 'modern' bike) since the freehub on the stock set of wheels has died, and a set of carbon fiber aero sewup wheels which I'm not sure what I'm going to do with them (summer use on the Diamondback?), but they were in nice condition and cheeeeeeep! And a Campagnolo aero bottle and cage for my third Rossin. And I came home with eight free sewups, of which six look like they're going to be useful.
Turnout was definitely not up to two years ago. The couple of guys I normally see who deal in 20's and earlier American bikes weren't there this year (so much for my plans on offloading the third bike), merchant count felt lighter, the bicycle corral was definitely half of what it usually was, and the place was nowhere near as crowded as past years. Hell, I never had to wait in line for a urinal in the men's room this time.
__________________
Syke
“No one in this world, so far as I know — and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office thereby.”
H.L. Mencken, (1926)
Syke
“No one in this world, so far as I know — and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me — has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people. Nor has anyone ever lost public office thereby.”
H.L. Mencken, (1926)
Last edited by sykerocker; 02-15-22 at 06:16 PM.
#12
Bicycle Repairman
I made it again. Sold three bikes and bought three more. Got a roll of cable housing and several used long cage derailleurs. Hoping to score some bulk consumables but with supply chain issues still being a problem, not many shops were there selling them. I thought turnout was good and saw a lot of goodies changing hands. Much much better than last year but not quite back to 2019-2020 crowds. Always a good time and a well-run show. They also let vendors set up on Saturday night now.