Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Classic & Vintage
Reload this Page >

Show your Trek

Search
Notices
Classic & Vintage This forum is to discuss the many aspects of classic and vintage bicycles, including musclebikes, lightweights, middleweights, hi-wheelers, bone-shakers, safety bikes and much more.

Show your Trek

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 01-01-23, 04:30 PM
  #2476  
thumpism 
Bikes are okay, I guess.
 
thumpism's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Richmond, Virginia
Posts: 6,938

Bikes: Waterford Paramount Touring, Giant CFM-2, Raleigh Sports 3-speeds in M23 & L23, Schwinn Cimarron oddball build, Marin Palisades Trail dropbar conversion, Nishiki Cresta GT

Mentioned: 69 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2647 Post(s)
Liked 2,446 Times in 1,557 Posts
Originally Posted by mhespenheide
I'll try it, but (like any quill stem), as you raise the stem, the handlebars also move back. I'd want to raise it up 2-3cm higher but keep the same forward extension. Can't really do that, though!
As dorky as they might look, adjustable stems can help you play with the fit until you find what suits.
thumpism is offline  
Likes For thumpism:
Old 01-01-23, 11:17 PM
  #2477  
mhespenheide 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 2019
Location: Burien WA
Posts: 512

Bikes: Cannondale Synapse, LeMond Victoire, Bianchi Campione d'Italia, Kona Hei Hei, Ritchey Ultra, Schwinn "Paramount" PDG, '83 Trek 640

Mentioned: 7 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 268 Post(s)
Liked 325 Times in 211 Posts
Hmm. Thanks to both of you; those are both good ideas.
mhespenheide is offline  
Old 01-02-23, 08:08 AM
  #2478  
Doug Fattic 
framebuilder
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Niles, Michigan
Posts: 1,471
Mentioned: 50 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 615 Post(s)
Liked 1,916 Times in 656 Posts
Here is my sport touring Trek I fixed up about 20 years ago to do bike trips in Ukraine. It was donated to me by a friend as a thank you for packing and sending him a Mississippi built Schwinn he found in my area. I took off most of its original braze-ons and replaced them with ones I wanted. The 3 original brake cable guides on the top tube are bad for collecting moisture and start rusting underneath them. I also realigned the frame. Trek never had very tight tolerances for alignment so even new ones right out of the box aren't all that straight. Then just for fun and my own curiosity, I painted it a chameleon color. i equipped it with a used 8sp Campy triple group, Students on campus often wanted to go on bike rides and I would use it to ride around the country side with them.

In the back of the storage shed are a couple more Treks I also repainted. This picture was taken and sent to me a few months ago after the Russians invaded Bucha, Ukraine where these bicycles are located. They broke in both our workshop and this storage shed and stole many things but not these Treks. The inside of the shed is messy because the Russians left it messy. In fact the door to the shed was left wide open for weeks before people could come back to campus to see what damage the Russians had done. In fact I'm not sure what they took or left besides the Treks. I think I had sleeping bags in the now empty boxes above the bikes.


My reconditioned Trek and other Treks the Russians didn't bother to steal in our storage shed in Bucha, Ukraine
Doug Fattic is offline  
Old 01-02-23, 09:30 PM
  #2479  
Bruce27
Full Member
 
Bruce27's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 419
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 60 Post(s)
Liked 195 Times in 66 Posts

Last edited by Bruce27; 01-02-23 at 09:34 PM.
Bruce27 is offline  
Likes For Bruce27:
Old 01-03-23, 04:32 AM
  #2480  
merziac
Senior Member
 
merziac's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 13,046

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

Mentioned: 267 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4512 Post(s)
Liked 6,387 Times in 3,672 Posts
Would have thought this was here but seems not so here it is, one of two Treks I own.

Not a fan, not because of the bikes but because they changed the LBS landscape in PDX dramatically and swiftly when they rolled into town, and not in a good way IMO.





merziac is offline  
Likes For merziac:
Old 01-03-23, 06:58 AM
  #2481  
ehcoplex 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2021
Posts: 1,683

Bikes: '38 Schwinn New World, ’69 Peugeot PX-10, '72 Peugeot PX-10, ‘7? Valgan, '78 Raleigh Comp GS, ’79 Holdsworth Pro, ’80 Peugeot TH-8 tandem, '87 Trek 400T, ‘7? Raleigh Sports, ‘7? Raleigh Superbe, ‘6? Hercules

Mentioned: 16 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 761 Post(s)
Liked 1,563 Times in 757 Posts
Originally Posted by merziac
Not a fan, not because of the bikes but because they changed the LBS landscape in PDX dramatically and swiftly when they rolled into town, and not in a good way IMO.
They are rather the Guitar Center of bicycles now..
ehcoplex is offline  
Likes For ehcoplex:
Old 01-03-23, 12:34 PM
  #2482  
merziac
Senior Member
 
merziac's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 13,046

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

Mentioned: 267 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4512 Post(s)
Liked 6,387 Times in 3,672 Posts
Originally Posted by ehcoplex
They are rather the Guitar Center of bicycles now..
Yep, my point exactly, they never weren't IMO, steamrolled the scene here and half the good, oldschool LBS's folded within a year or two.

I'm sure half of them were on their last leg after the bike boom and then the bottom falling out but one big Trek shop was like a sledgehammer.

All of a sudden Treks were everywhere, seems like no accident, Trek = Trendy, Welcome to PDX.
merziac is offline  
Old 01-03-23, 12:41 PM
  #2483  
AdventureManCO 
The Huffmeister
 
AdventureManCO's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: The Le Grande HQ
Posts: 2,739

Bikes: '79 Trek 938, '86 Jim Merz Allez SE, '90 Miyata 1000, '68 PX-10, '80 PXN-10, '73 Super Course, '87 Guerciotti, '83 Trek 600, '80 Huffy Le Grande

Mentioned: 45 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1226 Post(s)
Liked 3,554 Times in 1,410 Posts
Originally Posted by merziac
Yep, my point exactly, they never weren't IMO, steamrolled the scene here and half the good, oldschool LBS's folded within a year or two.

I'm sure half of them were on their last leg after the bike boom and then the bottom falling out but one big Trek shop was like a sledgehammer.

All of a sudden Treks were everywhere, seems like no accident, Trek = Trendy, Welcome to PDX.

I'd be curious to hear JohnDThompson 's take on this, since I think he was there around that time. I'm just sad my new-to-me '83 600 has a one piece headtube/lug tamping in place of a good ol' fashioned lug'd n' braze'd headtube
AdventureManCO is offline  
Old 01-03-23, 01:16 PM
  #2484  
merziac
Senior Member
 
merziac's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 13,046

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

Mentioned: 267 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4512 Post(s)
Liked 6,387 Times in 3,672 Posts
Originally Posted by AdventureManCO
I'd be curious to hear JohnDThompson 's take on this, since I think he was there around that time. I'm just sad my new-to-me '83 600 has a one piece headtube/lug tamping in place of a good ol' fashioned lug'd n' braze'd headtube
Well he was at ground zero and was likely all in, wisely so.

Treks invasion of PDX was largely the work of the family that brought them in and they were all in, really put in the work so it paid off big.

Good folks in a very affluent area that was ripe for the transition, plenty of families needing lots of bikes and well able to buy them so trendy before it was trendy.

Like I said, nothing really against the bikes, they were good, and not cheap, again, trendy.
merziac is offline  
Old 01-07-23, 10:08 AM
  #2485  
XxHaimBondxX
Full Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Albany, NY
Posts: 416

Bikes: Trek FX 7.3, Specialized Roubaix, Orbea Terra, Aostimotor S17 ebike, Huffy RedRock (first bike)

Mentioned: 0 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 200 Post(s)
Liked 266 Times in 133 Posts
Just got it home. Don't know the model or year. Not sure what to do with it once cleaned up, maybe add to the "stable. Appears to be 1977-1980 412 based on decoding serial number.


Last edited by XxHaimBondxX; 01-10-23 at 09:06 AM. Reason: added model
XxHaimBondxX is online now  
Likes For XxHaimBondxX:
Old 01-07-23, 01:26 PM
  #2486  
The Golden Boy 
Extraordinary Magnitude
 
The Golden Boy's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Waukesha WI
Posts: 13,648

Bikes: 1978 Trek TX700; 1978/79 Trek 736; 1984 Specialized Stumpjumper Sport; 1984 Schwinn Voyageur SP; 1985 Trek 620; 1985 Trek 720; 1986 Trek 400 Elance; 1987 Schwinn High Sierra; 1990 Miyata 1000LT

Mentioned: 84 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2608 Post(s)
Liked 1,703 Times in 937 Posts
Originally Posted by ehcoplex
They are rather the Guitar Center of bicycles now..
Originally Posted by merziac
Yep, my point exactly, they never weren't IMO, steamrolled the scene here and half the good, oldschool LBS's folded within a year or two.

I'm sure half of them were on their last leg after the bike boom and then the bottom falling out but one big Trek shop was like a sledgehammer.

All of a sudden Treks were everywhere, seems like no accident, Trek = Trendy, Welcome to PDX.
I'm having trouble understanding any of these points.

What made/makes Trek "trendy?" Maybe we're thinking about different time frames- but American company, making American made and American assembled bikes is about as trendy as Schwinn. If you ask me, something more exotic and exclusive makes something "trendy." Like something imported from Italy or France or England... American stuff is just... American stuff... Maybe a little less trendy than some other companies that established themselves by rebranding existing products and literally STEALING American designs and having them made in Japan and importing them back into the US while litigating everyone that stands up to them into oblivion... but I digress.

If half the LBSs were on their last legs- if a Trek shop hadn't opened, and then they failed- would it still have been Trek's fault? Which then goes to the other point- does "Trek" actually own the store- or is it a local franchisee licensing the Trek name and products and services? Which is then some local businessmen torpedoing other local business owners...

And since the Guitar Center analogy was brought up... I live about 50 miles from Waterloo, 20 miles from Milwaukee (also about 20 from Waterford)- but the closest Trek store I know of is about 90 miles away in Madison. (Why isn't there a Trek store in the most populous city in the state?) The one time I was in there, it was mostly only Trek and Trek owned products (maybe it was different back in the day, maybe it is different now- but then why have a "Trek" store?). To use the GC analogy- that would be like only GC owned products would be sold in the store- while I think GC has pushed out brands in favor of GC owned brands (LiveWire vs any other cables)- GC sells all different brands it has agreements with. Plus- I don't think GC is a franchise- meaning Guitar Center owns the individual Guitar Center stores- not a local ownership group.

While I'm kind of a Trek homer, I'm also pretty much the 'anti-monopoly' type person- On yet the other hand, I understand the point of a business is to make money. It's very much an oversimplification to say "Trek started with 2 hippies in a barn and grew to one of the major players in the world." My interest in Trek tails off after the brass head badges left, so I don't pay a whole lot of attention to Trek after that.
__________________
*Recipient of the 2006 Time Magazine "Person Of The Year" Award*

Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!

"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
The Golden Boy is offline  
Old 01-07-23, 01:52 PM
  #2487  
merziac
Senior Member
 
merziac's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: PDX
Posts: 13,046

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

Mentioned: 267 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 4512 Post(s)
Liked 6,387 Times in 3,672 Posts
Originally Posted by The Golden Boy
I'm having trouble understanding any of these points.

What made/makes Trek "trendy?" Maybe we're thinking about different time frames- but American company, making American made and American assembled bikes is about as trendy as Schwinn. If you ask me, something more exotic and exclusive makes something "trendy." Like something imported from Italy or France or England... American stuff is just... American stuff... Maybe a little less trendy than some other companies that established themselves by rebranding existing products and literally STEALING American designs and having them made in Japan and importing them back into the US while litigating everyone that stands up to them into oblivion... but I digress.

If half the LBSs were on their last legs- if a Trek shop hadn't opened, and then they failed- would it still have been Trek's fault? Which then goes to the other point- does "Trek" actually own the store- or is it a local franchisee licensing the Trek name and products and services? Which is then some local businessmen torpedoing other local business owners...

And since the Guitar Center analogy was brought up... I live about 50 miles from Waterloo, 20 miles from Milwaukee (also about 20 from Waterford)- but the closest Trek store I know of is about 90 miles away in Madison. (Why isn't there a Trek store in the most populous city in the state?) The one time I was in there, it was mostly only Trek and Trek owned products (maybe it was different back in the day, maybe it is different now- but then why have a "Trek" store?). To use the GC analogy- that would be like only GC owned products would be sold in the store- while I think GC has pushed out brands in favor of GC owned brands (LiveWire vs any other cables)- GC sells all different brands it has agreements with. Plus- I don't think GC is a franchise- meaning Guitar Center owns the individual Guitar Center stores- not a local ownership group.

While I'm kind of a Trek homer, I'm also pretty much the 'anti-monopoly' type person- On yet the other hand, I understand the point of a business is to make money. It's very much an oversimplification to say "Trek started with 2 hippies in a barn and grew to one of the major players in the world." My interest in Trek tails off after the brass head badges left, so I don't pay a whole lot of attention to Trek after that.
Well all good points and yes maybe a bit oversimplified. The area they opened in was/is very affluent so it was a 1,2 punch.

Initially it seems they sold to mainly families that didn't necessarily ride them much aside from the kids.

Once they filled up all the neighborhood garages they were well established when the possibly more serious riders came calling after that and not having found the old LBS network able to help them.

They benefited from 2 different back to back trends in PDX when we were becoming trendy setting trends.

Not saying this was engineered upfront but it was a perfect success/storm much like Trek in general.

I'm not sure about the last leg theory but we all know small LBS's generally have tough go of it. A couple of the shops nearby said they were impacted early by the Trek store and no, it wasn't a factory store, it was a well known local to the neighborhood family that took advantage of the opportunity and made it fly.
merziac is offline  
Old 01-19-23, 02:44 PM
  #2488  
Bruce27
Full Member
 
Bruce27's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 419
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 60 Post(s)
Liked 195 Times in 66 Posts
My slightly altered 81 all cleaned up with new wheels. First new set of wheels in 42 years.


Last edited by Bruce27; 01-19-23 at 03:53 PM.
Bruce27 is offline  
Likes For Bruce27:
Old 01-19-23, 02:47 PM
  #2489  
stedge 
Newbie
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Posts: 60
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 18 Post(s)
Liked 40 Times in 16 Posts
my first build

bought the frame here, found some parts and built up a bike for the first time. Works pretty well!
stedge is offline  
Old 01-19-23, 08:13 PM
  #2490  
AdventureManCO 
The Huffmeister
 
AdventureManCO's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: The Le Grande HQ
Posts: 2,739

Bikes: '79 Trek 938, '86 Jim Merz Allez SE, '90 Miyata 1000, '68 PX-10, '80 PXN-10, '73 Super Course, '87 Guerciotti, '83 Trek 600, '80 Huffy Le Grande

Mentioned: 45 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1226 Post(s)
Liked 3,554 Times in 1,410 Posts
Originally Posted by stedge
bought the frame here, found some parts and built up a bike for the first time. Works pretty well!
WOW quite an intro! TX900?
AdventureManCO is offline  
Likes For AdventureManCO:
Old 01-19-23, 08:50 PM
  #2491  
stedge 
Newbie
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Posts: 60
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 18 Post(s)
Liked 40 Times in 16 Posts
Yep

Tx900. Yes.
thanks!

Last edited by stedge; 01-19-23 at 09:04 PM.
stedge is offline  
Likes For stedge:
Old 01-19-23, 09:26 PM
  #2492  
mountaindave 
tantum vehi
 
mountaindave's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Flathead Valley, MT
Posts: 4,440

Bikes: More than I care to admit

Mentioned: 153 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1167 Post(s)
Liked 992 Times in 491 Posts
Originally Posted by stedge
bought the frame here, found some parts and built up a bike for the first time. Works pretty well!
For a first timer, that’s a tight build!
mountaindave is offline  
Old 01-19-23, 10:18 PM
  #2493  
stedge 
Newbie
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Posts: 60
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 18 Post(s)
Liked 40 Times in 16 Posts
You

You, all, inspired me!
stedge is offline  
Likes For stedge:
Old 01-20-23, 05:09 AM
  #2494  
mtbikerjohn 
Full Member
 
mtbikerjohn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: near Detroit
Posts: 303

Bikes: a few..

Mentioned: 5 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 82 Post(s)
Liked 147 Times in 95 Posts

From this..

To this..

The Ultegra drivetrain was moved,shortly after this was taken, to my Kellogg-era Ross. The Trek is currently built up with a 3x6 drivetrain..all Suntour except the Sugino Alpina triple crankset and Gran Compe 610 center pulls..
mtbikerjohn is online now  
Old 01-20-23, 11:18 AM
  #2495  
sd5782 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Toledo Ohio
Posts: 1,496

Bikes: 1964 Huffy Sportsman, 1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport (3), 1982 Trek 412, 1983 Trek 700, 1989 Miyata 1000LT, 1991 Bianchi Boardwalk, plus others

Mentioned: 21 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 583 Post(s)
Liked 699 Times in 394 Posts
So Nice

Originally Posted by Bruce27
My slightly altered 81 all cleaned up with new wheels. First new set of wheels in 42 years.

I had to look up the Trek 81 catalog to check this one out as I saw the full Reynolds stickers with the non racing wheelbase and the twin rack eyelets on the seat stays. 710, and very similar to my 83 model 700. This seemed to be such a nice era with silver brazing and Reynolds tubes, but not race bikes. I bet it is a fine ride. Very nice.
sd5782 is offline  
Likes For sd5782:
Old 01-20-23, 12:56 PM
  #2496  
thumpism 
Bikes are okay, I guess.
 
thumpism's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Richmond, Virginia
Posts: 6,938

Bikes: Waterford Paramount Touring, Giant CFM-2, Raleigh Sports 3-speeds in M23 & L23, Schwinn Cimarron oddball build, Marin Palisades Trail dropbar conversion, Nishiki Cresta GT

Mentioned: 69 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 2647 Post(s)
Liked 2,446 Times in 1,557 Posts
Originally Posted by sd5782
I had to look up the Trek 81 catalog to check this one out as I saw the full Reynolds stickers with the non racing wheelbase and the twin rack eyelets on the seat stays. 710, and very similar to my 83 model 700. This seemed to be such a nice era with silver brazing and Reynolds tubes, but not race bikes. I bet it is a fine ride. Very nice.
Mine was a 25.5" built up with various bits and I never felt comfortable with it on loaded descents . Like my previous Batavus, it had an unnerving headshake so I sold it. Don't need that feeling on a touring bike. Hope that one is better than mine.
thumpism is offline  
Old 01-20-23, 01:25 PM
  #2497  
sd5782 
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Toledo Ohio
Posts: 1,496

Bikes: 1964 Huffy Sportsman, 1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport (3), 1982 Trek 412, 1983 Trek 700, 1989 Miyata 1000LT, 1991 Bianchi Boardwalk, plus others

Mentioned: 21 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 583 Post(s)
Liked 699 Times in 394 Posts
That would probably be pretty thin tubing on a big bike, and especially somewhat loaded and going downhill. Kudos to Trek though for giving people options, as your application probably wasn’t the intended use. Another rider tooling around the countryside more casually might write to applaud the compliant ride.
sd5782 is offline  
Likes For sd5782:
Old 01-23-23, 01:47 PM
  #2498  
Jacob_R_59 
Junior Member
 
Jacob_R_59's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 96

Bikes: 2000 Serotta Hors Categorie, 1990s Lennard Zinn, 1985 Guerciotti Jet, 1975 Peugeot PX-10,

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 44 Post(s)
Liked 118 Times in 30 Posts
My “Gugificazione” 1985 Trek 660


Cast dropouts with internal rear derailleur cable routing retained.

Overall view of the frame. The fork is still wrapped up!

Mark added René Herse Cycles mounts for Mafac centerpull brakes.

Investment cast seat lug with fastback seatstays.
Jacob_R_59 is offline  
Likes For Jacob_R_59:
Old 01-23-23, 01:56 PM
  #2499  
Jacob_R_59 
Junior Member
 
Jacob_R_59's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2021
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 96

Bikes: 2000 Serotta Hors Categorie, 1990s Lennard Zinn, 1985 Guerciotti Jet, 1975 Peugeot PX-10,

Mentioned: 2 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 44 Post(s)
Liked 118 Times in 30 Posts
Followup to Above Thread on “Gugificazione” Trek 660

I’m down in Olympia, Washington where today I’ve just picked up my 1985 65cm Trek 660 from Forever Powdercoat.

I bought it from Forum member, RiddleofSteel in 2019.

I then sent it to Forum member, Mark Guglielmana of Portland, Oregon. Mark added René Herse direct mounts for Mafac centerpull brakes, plus mounts for my Velo-Orange fenders and Nitto Randonneur rack.

I used Illusion Blue powder from Prismatic Powders to approximate a Toyota color, RAV4 Electric Storm Blue.

I also ordered a complete Trek “Build A Set” of Trek 660 decals, including gold foil headtube badge and Reynolds 531 decal, from Velocals shortly before they closed their doors on 12/31/22. They will be missed! 😭

I’ve had encouragement from Forum member Drillium Dude to address and speed up my backlog of projects, so this will be my 1st build of 2023.

Thanks for looking.
Jacob_R_59 is offline  
Likes For Jacob_R_59:
Old 01-23-23, 10:04 PM
  #2500  
mountaindave 
tantum vehi
 
mountaindave's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Flathead Valley, MT
Posts: 4,440

Bikes: More than I care to admit

Mentioned: 153 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1167 Post(s)
Liked 992 Times in 491 Posts
Originally Posted by Jacob_R_59
Thanks for looking.
Thanks for sharing! Great color and the work by @gugie is always top notch!!
mountaindave is offline  


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.