Schwinn Paramount Tandem - Any idea on what year it is?
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Schwinn Paramount Tandem - Any idea on what year it is?
I found a nice condition Schwinn Paramount Tandem and wondering if anyone knows what year it is and any addtional information.
It was purchased from an Estate sale, and clearly had not been ridden in a while. I pumped the tires and put some oil on the cables, everything works, but it needs a full overhaul and cleaning before it gets ridden any great distance.
I probably didn't need another tandem - after all, who needs another when you have one that hardly gets used, but my resident enabler convinced me it would be a fun project.
Any help from the forum is much appreciated.




It was purchased from an Estate sale, and clearly had not been ridden in a while. I pumped the tires and put some oil on the cables, everything works, but it needs a full overhaul and cleaning before it gets ridden any great distance.
I probably didn't need another tandem - after all, who needs another when you have one that hardly gets used, but my resident enabler convinced me it would be a fun project.
Any help from the forum is much appreciated.





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Yes, mid 70's is my guess as well. It came with the owners manual, a couple of Campy wrenches and extra deraillieuer cables, none of which had an actual date
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Pretty dang cool, short couple, ladyback, Schwinn Approved SunTour bar cons and Mafac tandem front canti's, Huret FD is interesting.
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The s/n should be stamped in the NDS RDO and will tell us for sure.

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If I ever find one of these in my/our size......

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Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.
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Serial number that is written in the owners manual is BN802007
Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.
Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.

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Serial number that is written in the owners manual is BN802007
Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.
Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.

What spare derailleur came with it?
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Serial number that is written in the owners manual is BN802007
Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.
Per your earlier post merziac I also thought the FD was interesting - perhaps a replacement.
With most FDs, that would rotate the whole mech clockwise/forward, causing the back of the cage to be too high. Then the chain drags there when using the small chainring and some of the smaller rear cogs. But the Huret cage uniquely bolts to the parallelogram arms in a way that lets you space the cage rearward.
Note, I recommend replacing the front brake pads immediately. The rubber pads are only glued to the finned holders, and the glue has been known to come loose. Actually pretty often, from all the reports I've heard of this over the years. I saw it happen once myself too. When the pad falls off, you have zero front brake. People have reported that it happened all at once with no warning.
Too bad, because those pads are original equipment, and wicked cool. Just not for riding.
Here's the '78 spec sheet. Note the FD is called out as a Huret Success, which is what you have.

The only parts I see that are not original are the rear seatpost and rack, and the foam grips.
The brazed-on water bottle mounts were an extra-cost option.
Funny that they used a "superlight" aluminum TA bottle cage on a 45 pound bike. I'm not judging! But chrome-plated steel would probably be more appropriate, and put the sweet TA cage on some other, lighter bike.
Enjoy!
Mark B
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just as a point of reference, let me offer the tandem page from my 1976 catalog.
This Paramount tandem has T.A. cranks, so that should exclude it from the possible dates.

high res. version
Steve in Peoria
This Paramount tandem has T.A. cranks, so that should exclude it from the possible dates.

high res. version
Steve in Peoria
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A Huret FD was OE, and is almost a requirement for these short wheelbase (curved seat tube) models, due to the almost-vertical angle of the tube where the FD attaches.
With most FDs, that would rotate the whole mech clockwise/forward, causing the back of the cage to be too high. Then the chain drags there when using the small chainring and some of the smaller rear cogs. But the Huret cage uniquely bolts to the parallelogram arms in a way that lets you space the cage rearward.
Note, I recommend replacing the front brake pads immediately. The rubber pads are only glued to the finned holders, and the glue has been known to come loose. Actually pretty often, from all the reports I've heard of this over the years. I saw it happen once myself too. When the pad falls off, you have zero front brake. People have reported that it happened all at once with no warning.
Too bad, because those pads are original equipment, and wicked cool. Just not for riding.
Here's the '78 spec sheet. Note the FD is called out as a Huret Success, which is what you have.

The only parts I see that are not original are the rear seatpost and rack, and the foam grips.
The brazed-on water bottle mounts were an extra-cost option.
Funny that they used a "superlight" aluminum TA bottle cage on a 45 pound bike. I'm not judging! But chrome-plated steel would probably be more appropriate, and put the sweet TA cage on some other, lighter bike.
Enjoy!
Mark B
With most FDs, that would rotate the whole mech clockwise/forward, causing the back of the cage to be too high. Then the chain drags there when using the small chainring and some of the smaller rear cogs. But the Huret cage uniquely bolts to the parallelogram arms in a way that lets you space the cage rearward.
Note, I recommend replacing the front brake pads immediately. The rubber pads are only glued to the finned holders, and the glue has been known to come loose. Actually pretty often, from all the reports I've heard of this over the years. I saw it happen once myself too. When the pad falls off, you have zero front brake. People have reported that it happened all at once with no warning.
Too bad, because those pads are original equipment, and wicked cool. Just not for riding.
Here's the '78 spec sheet. Note the FD is called out as a Huret Success, which is what you have.

The only parts I see that are not original are the rear seatpost and rack, and the foam grips.
The brazed-on water bottle mounts were an extra-cost option.
Funny that they used a "superlight" aluminum TA bottle cage on a 45 pound bike. I'm not judging! But chrome-plated steel would probably be more appropriate, and put the sweet TA cage on some other, lighter bike.
Enjoy!
Mark B
I'll probably remove the bottle cage and use it on another bike. You are right about the weight difference, it is really a who cares on the bottle cage.
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Note about the Campy triple crank: It has a 36t inner chainring, which doesn't allow a low enough gear for a lot of people, especially if you have steep hills. Stop reading if you ride flatlands and/or you're so strong you don't need a lower gear.
Campy only made those granny rings in 36t, no other choice, but aftermarket rings have been made as small as 30t. Actually I have one I made at 29t, but it has some slightly impractical compromises, so lets say 30t is the minimum. Since they're essentially custom-made in a cottage industry, they might not be cheap. I forget who-all has made them. Jim Merz made 31 and 32t rings (but not 30t) in the '70s. Merz rings are super rare now, hard to find. Bob Freeman of North Bend Washington has made some, in 32 and 30t, but I don't know if he's selling them currently, might be sold out.
I make them by starting with a 74 mm BCD ring, drilling and counterboring 5 new holes at the Campy's 100 mm diameter, then cutting the original 74 mm holes off. Using just a few hand tools, so this is do-able if you're handy. Use the existing 36t ring as the template for where to put the new holes in the 74 mm ring. I have a Flickr album showing how I did it, if you want to try it yourself.
Here's a 30t I made:
Campy only made those granny rings in 36t, no other choice, but aftermarket rings have been made as small as 30t. Actually I have one I made at 29t, but it has some slightly impractical compromises, so lets say 30t is the minimum. Since they're essentially custom-made in a cottage industry, they might not be cheap. I forget who-all has made them. Jim Merz made 31 and 32t rings (but not 30t) in the '70s. Merz rings are super rare now, hard to find. Bob Freeman of North Bend Washington has made some, in 32 and 30t, but I don't know if he's selling them currently, might be sold out.
I make them by starting with a 74 mm BCD ring, drilling and counterboring 5 new holes at the Campy's 100 mm diameter, then cutting the original 74 mm holes off. Using just a few hand tools, so this is do-able if you're handy. Use the existing 36t ring as the template for where to put the new holes in the 74 mm ring. I have a Flickr album showing how I did it, if you want to try it yourself.
Here's a 30t I made:

Last edited by bulgie; 03-31-23 at 07:53 PM.
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Perhaps Richard Schwinn at Waterford bikes might have some knowledge and history.
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Dang, nice score! A Schwinn tandem just came up on my FB feed for cheap and for a minute I thought it might be a Paramount..... alas, I'm 99% sure it's one of the 'cheap' ones that someone did some upgrades on.... and I don't need another project...... or do I.....
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Check the head tube for the serial number. First two letters indicate year and month, unlike other Paramounts.
B N = February 1977
Schwinn serial numbers
The headbadge should have the day and year it was built up stamped in the red painted area.
The serial number reflects the brazing date, which may be many years earlier than the build date unless it was a custom order.
The curved stoker’s seat tube was featured on the larger lady back frames, 24/22 front/rear. I guess the shorter frames needed a straight tube for the seatpost.
By 1979 the rd was a SunTour VGT or similar and hubs were Phil, so 1977-78 sounds right.
More info here: https://www.schwinnbikeforum.com/SLDB...977paramounttd
B N = February 1977
Schwinn serial numbers
The headbadge should have the day and year it was built up stamped in the red painted area.
The serial number reflects the brazing date, which may be many years earlier than the build date unless it was a custom order.
The curved stoker’s seat tube was featured on the larger lady back frames, 24/22 front/rear. I guess the shorter frames needed a straight tube for the seatpost.
By 1979 the rd was a SunTour VGT or similar and hubs were Phil, so 1977-78 sounds right.
More info here: https://www.schwinnbikeforum.com/SLDB...977paramounttd

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72+76 Super Course, 74 P-10+ 79 Tandem Paramounts, 84 Raleigh Alyeska, 84 Voyageur SP, 85 Miyata Sport 10 mixte and a queue
Last edited by Schreck83; 04-01-23 at 07:21 AM.
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I have one, I have used better tandems.
way too flexible.
look for a Santana. One of the Cannondale examples might be fun.
serial number will confirm, earliest I think based on curved tube and graphics- 1976 easily could be later a few.
you are stuck with 27" wheels. There are a FEW made for 700c
I would probably exchange the front pads and holders.
way too flexible.
look for a Santana. One of the Cannondale examples might be fun.
serial number will confirm, earliest I think based on curved tube and graphics- 1976 easily could be later a few.
you are stuck with 27" wheels. There are a FEW made for 700c
I would probably exchange the front pads and holders.
Last edited by repechage; 04-01-23 at 07:58 AM.
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I have one, I have used better tandems.
way too flexible.
look for a Santana. One of the Cannondale examples might be fun.
serial number will confirm, earliest I think based on curved tube and graphics- 1976 easily could be later a few.
you are stuck with 27" wheels. There are a FEW made for 700c
I would probably exchange the front pads and holders.
way too flexible.
look for a Santana. One of the Cannondale examples might be fun.
serial number will confirm, earliest I think based on curved tube and graphics- 1976 easily could be later a few.
you are stuck with 27" wheels. There are a FEW made for 700c
I would probably exchange the front pads and holders.
I have several other tandem frames, one is an unknown custom that appears to be pretty nice, an Atala that reportedly rides well, a crashed BJ and a boat anchor lower Gitane.
Not sure any of it matters, my potential stoker may never get onboard so.....
Still need a Paramount.

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The Success front derailleur uses a spring pusher plate on the inside and actually shifts quite well, in spite of its Huret "Isn't there some way we can stamp this part out of flat plate?" heritage. There were only a few years at the end of the Paramount tandem production where they came with the Campagnolo crossover-drive cranksets, so it's likely a '77 or '78. These frames were the end of the long run of Schwinn fillet brazed models, using their own straight gauge chromoly tubing with sleeves inserted in the ends as reinforcements. I find it interesting that the Paramount tandem of the 1970s was an evolution of the 26" wheeled Schwinn Town & Country tandems that were the only ones they offered from post-WW2 to around 1960, when the welded Twinn was introduced. The T&C had upright bars and slightly different geometry, but it featured the "short-coupled," curved rear seat tube. They also came with a cool chainguard that covered the timing chain and eccentric front bottom bracket for timing chain adjustment. They were one of the few Schwinns that came with steel, cottered cranks. The Twinn was a solid step down from the T&C in almost every respect, and may have been the heaviest production bicycle manufactured in the 20th Century. The Paramount tandem appears to be almost identical to the T&C with the exception of the geometry and components, even down to the round fork blades. Schwinn repurposed the Town & Country model name for their adult tricycles. Almost every Paramount tandem sold in the 1970s came with two sets of Campy Superleggera pedals! Some also had road versions of the curved Campy track skewers, before the CPSC version which appeared in 1978. For some reason, these can fetch some serious scratch on the auction market.
There are some excellent photos of a T&C at Bikeville thoughts: For Sale- Schwinn Town and Country tandem
Edit: I forgot to mention that the Paramount has a cramped stoker's compartment by modern standards, and typically has a very short stem, sticking the stoker's nose close to the captain's smelly back. I suggest putting flat bars in the back, rather than drops to put the stoker a little farther back, along with a medium-to-wide saddle.
There are some excellent photos of a T&C at Bikeville thoughts: For Sale- Schwinn Town and Country tandem
Edit: I forgot to mention that the Paramount has a cramped stoker's compartment by modern standards, and typically has a very short stem, sticking the stoker's nose close to the captain's smelly back. I suggest putting flat bars in the back, rather than drops to put the stoker a little farther back, along with a medium-to-wide saddle.
Last edited by sbarner; 04-02-23 at 04:48 PM. Reason: Additional info
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The Success front derailleur uses a spring pusher plate on the inside and actually shifts quite well, in spite of its Huret "Isn't there some way we can stamp this part out of flat plate?" heritage. There were only a few years at the end of the Paramount tandem production where they came with the Campagnolo crossover-drive cranksets, so it's likely a '77 or '78. These frames were the end of the long run of Schwinn fillet brazed models, using their own straight gauge chromoly tubing with sleeves inserted in the ends as reinforcements. I find it interesting that the Paramount tandem of the 1970s was an evolution of the 26" wheeled Schwinn Town & Country tandems that were the only ones they offered from post-WW2 to around 1960, when the welded Twinn was introduced. The T&C had upright bars and slightly different geometry, but it featured the "short-coupled," curved rear seat tube. They also came with a cool chainguard that covered the timing chain and eccentric front bottom bracket for timing chain adjustment. They were one of the few Schwinns that came with steel, cottered cranks. The Twinn was a solid step down from the T&C in almost every respect, and may have been the heaviest production bicycle manufactured in the 20th Century. The Paramount tandem appears to be almost identical to the T&C with the exception of the geometry and components, even down to the round fork blades. Schwinn repurposed the Town & Country model name for their adult tricycles. Almost every Paramount tandem sold in the 1970s came with two sets of Campy Superleggera pedals! Some also had road versions of the curved Campy track skewers, before the CPSC version which appeared in 1978. For some reason, these can fetch some serious scratch on the auction market.
There are some excellent photos of a T&C at Bikeville thoughts: For Sale- Schwinn Town and Country tandem
Edit: I forgot to mention that the Paramount has a cramped stoker's compartment by modern standards, and typically has a very short stem, sticking the stoker's nose close to the captain's smelly back. I suggest putting flat bars in the back, rather than drops to put the stoker a little farther back, along with a medium-to-wide saddle.
There are some excellent photos of a T&C at Bikeville thoughts: For Sale- Schwinn Town and Country tandem
Edit: I forgot to mention that the Paramount has a cramped stoker's compartment by modern standards, and typically has a very short stem, sticking the stoker's nose close to the captain's smelly back. I suggest putting flat bars in the back, rather than drops to put the stoker a little farther back, along with a medium-to-wide saddle.

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But wait, it gets worse! Due to the utterly stupid curved ST, the stoker's BB is further forward than even that 22" TT would indicate. The upshot is, stoker can't stand to pedal without knees hitting the handlebar. The stoker seat is already less comfortable than cap'n seat, even if your position is good, but not being able to lean forward on the bars means even more weight on the saddle. Not being able to stand up means no chances to get a little more blood flowing down there. Perfect, if your goal is making your wife/GF/buddy hate tandems.
I'm normally a bit of a Schwinn fanboy but I'm forced to conclude these tandems were designed by people that don't ride tandems — certainly not on the back seat! I know lots of tandem teams have ridden many happy miles on a P'mount, not saying it can't be done, just saying it's, um, sub-optimal? Like by a lot.
I'm normally very pro-C&V. I use 5-speed freewheels, Allvit derailers... I mean I can put up with a lot for period-correctness. But not a 22" RTT on a tandem, that's where I draw the line. Get a Burley, Cannondale, Santana, Rodriguez, pretty much anything 1980 and newer unless the builder had blinders on. Almost nothing else on the bike matters as much as having adequate space for the stoker to be comfortable.
Mark B
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...
I'm normally a bit of a Schwinn fanboy but I'm forced to conclude these tandems were designed by people that don't ride tandems — certainly not on the back seat! I know lots of tandem teams have ridden many happy miles on a P'mount, not saying it can't be done, just saying it's, um, sub-optimal? Like by a lot.
.....
Mark B
I'm normally a bit of a Schwinn fanboy but I'm forced to conclude these tandems were designed by people that don't ride tandems — certainly not on the back seat! I know lots of tandem teams have ridden many happy miles on a P'mount, not saying it can't be done, just saying it's, um, sub-optimal? Like by a lot.
.....
Mark B
I recall photos of track tandems where the stoker had his chin in the captains back, which makes me think the stoker's top tube must have been relatively short.
I don't have one of those photos handy, but I do have pics of a 1940's track tandem that was displayed at the 2016 Classic Rendezvous gathering. Maybe one of you folks can eyeball it and judge whether the stoker's top tube is as short as the 1970's Paramounts?
and a second topic... I like the extra set of stays, which I assume are to help stiffen up the rear end?
This leads to the next topic... would the short stoker top tube be used just to stiffen up the frame, or is it more to make the bike more maneuverable or aerodynamic?



Steve in Peoria
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Then (the story goes) they used the same jig made for the 1960 Oly bike to make P'mounts for sale through dealers.
I guess that story might be laughably wrong if the 1940s tandem you showed is really a Paramount. I guess it doesn't matter what they called it; the important fact is they had the ability to make tandems much earlier than 1960. The jig doesn't care if it's a Superior, Town & Country, or a Paramount.
The story could still be true, if they used a single-bike jig (or no jig at all) to make tandems previously, which is do-able, just inefficient. And only made a dedicated tandem jig in the buildup for the '60 Oly's. Certainly you don't need a jig to make a tandem; The Taylor bothers (Jack Taylor) made hundreds, maybe thousands? with just tubes laid on firebricks, with a heavy weight laid on to to hold the tubes down! Alignment checked by holding the frame up towards the window and squinting.
I recall photos of track tandems where the stoker had his chin in the captains back, which makes me think the stoker's top tube must have been relatively short.
I don't have one of those photos handy, but I do have pics of a 1940's track tandem that was displayed at the 2016 Classic Rendezvous gathering. Maybe one of you folks can eyeball it and judge whether the stoker's top tube is as short as the 1970's Paramounts?
and a second topic... I like the extra set of stays, which I assume are to help stiffen up the rear end?
This leads to the next topic... would the short stoker top tube be used just to stiffen up the frame, or is it more to make the bike more maneuverable or aerodynamic?
I don't have one of those photos handy, but I do have pics of a 1940's track tandem that was displayed at the 2016 Classic Rendezvous gathering. Maybe one of you folks can eyeball it and judge whether the stoker's top tube is as short as the 1970's Paramounts?
and a second topic... I like the extra set of stays, which I assume are to help stiffen up the rear end?
This leads to the next topic... would the short stoker top tube be used just to stiffen up the frame, or is it more to make the bike more maneuverable or aerodynamic?
EDIT: ooh and notice the tiny chainrings used for the timing chain on the '40s bike; definitely suboptimal for a sprint bike. Chain tension is inversely proportional to chainring size, all else being equal, so if you used rings twice as large, you'd have literally half the chain tension from the cap'n sprinting. There's a lot of frame flex caused by that chain tension, due to the chain being offset from the center-plane of the frame. It's not threoretical; you can feel it underfoot, and even see it by eye: the lower run of the chain sags visibly when cap'n applies force to the pedal, enough sometimes to cause the chain to derail, which can cause a crash. That type of flex is the main reason why some bottom tubes are oval instead of round.
Even if it didn't flex the frame, having double the chain tension can result in the chain snapping. I've seen it, happened right in front of me when Nelson Vails and Scott Berryman were on a Team USA sprint tandem. When they jumped, the timing chain broke. That's the captain's pedal force only BTW, stoker's strength doesn't go through the timing chain at all. So Vails broke that chain all by himself. And it wasn't a tiny chainring, it was Campy 144 BCD, so we know it was at least a 41t, probably bigger. Him on a chainring half as big would have sent shrapnel into the bleachers!
Last edited by bulgie; 04-04-23 at 03:36 PM.
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Yes I have heard that story, maybe apochryphal. The version I heard was the first Paramount tandems were made for the Rome Olympics (1960), and the only tandem event at the Oly's was Match Sprint. That's essentially a 10-second event, the part of it that matters. So comfort for long miles is not in the list of requirements.
Then (the story goes) they used the same jig made for the 1960 Oly bike to make P'mounts for sale through dealers.
I guess that story might be laughably wrong if the 1940s tandem you showed is really a Paramount. I guess it doesn't matter what they called it; the important fact is they had the ability to make tandems much earlier than 1960. The jig doesn't care if it's a Superior, Town & Country, or a Paramount.
Then (the story goes) they used the same jig made for the 1960 Oly bike to make P'mounts for sale through dealers.
I guess that story might be laughably wrong if the 1940s tandem you showed is really a Paramount. I guess it doesn't matter what they called it; the important fact is they had the ability to make tandems much earlier than 1960. The jig doesn't care if it's a Superior, Town & Country, or a Paramount.
In the meantime, a search on Flickr did pull up an early Schwinn tandem, advertised as the first Schwinn tandem, and built in 1948. This is from the photostream of "bobbiker" ... Bob F?

the photo can be found here.
It's got the same sort of extra stays, plus a diagonal tube in the front triangle only. One of the photos says it was for Jack Simes III and Jack Heid. I recognize the name of Mr. Simes, but don't know if he was one of those powerful sprinters.
Not directly related, but one of the shops in St. Louis (the old A-1 shop, now "Billy Goat Cycles") has a quad built by Ray Sr. (who started A-1). It's got 3 sets of stays too, but the middle set extends into a diagonal tube (with no top tube), so it makes sense. Being a quad, it must have been flexing all over the place. Ray did use a middle horizontal tube in each "triangle" for some extra torsional stiffness. It would be interesting to know just much that frame was flexing, though! With the modest braking power available, I don't suppose anyone was too interested in seeing how fast they could go.

The story could still be true, if they used a single-bike jig (or no jig at all) to make tandems previously, which is do-able, just inefficient. And only made a dedicated tandem jig in the buildup for the '60 Oly's. Certainly you don't need a jig to make a tandem; The Taylor bothers (Jack Taylor) made hundreds, maybe thousands? with just tubes laid on firebricks, with a heavy weight laid on to to hold the tubes down! Alignment checked by holding the frame up towards the window and squinting.
Yes and yes, all of the above. Except any stiffening of the rear triangle from those mid-stays on the 1940s bike is not going to be detectable, they are poorly placed to resist the stresses on a rear triangle. If those stays continued all the way up like on a mixte or on the red Paramount that started this thread, then they can "pull their weight" so to speak. But the ones on the '40s bike are just extra ground-hugging mass IMHO.
Yes and yes, all of the above. Except any stiffening of the rear triangle from those mid-stays on the 1940s bike is not going to be detectable, they are poorly placed to resist the stresses on a rear triangle. If those stays continued all the way up like on a mixte or on the red Paramount that started this thread, then they can "pull their weight" so to speak. But the ones on the '40s bike are just extra ground-hugging mass IMHO.

the photo can be found here.
EDIT: ooh and notice the tiny chainrings used for the timing chain on the '40s bike; definitely suboptimal for a sprint bike. Chain tension is inversely proportional to chainring size, all else being equal, so if you used rings twice as large, you'd have literally half the chain tension from the cap'n sprinting. There's a lot of frame flex caused by that chain tension, due to the chain being offset from the center-plane of the frame. It's not threoretical; you can feel it underfoot, and even see it by eye: the lower run of the chain sags visibly when cap'n applies force to the pedal, enough sometimes to cause the chain to derail, which can cause a crash. That type of flex is the main reason why some bottom tubes are oval instead of round.
Even if it didn't flex the frame, having double the chain tension can result in the chain snapping. I've seen it, happened right in front of me when Nelson Vails and Scott Berryman were on a Team USA sprint tandem. When they jumped, the timing chain broke. That's the captain's pedal force only BTW, stoker's strength doesn't go through the timing chain at all. So Vails broke that chain all by himself. And it wasn't a tiny chainring, it was Campy 144 BCD, so we know it was at least a 41t, probably bigger. Him on a chainring half as big would have sent shrapnel into the bleachers!
Even if it didn't flex the frame, having double the chain tension can result in the chain snapping. I've seen it, happened right in front of me when Nelson Vails and Scott Berryman were on a Team USA sprint tandem. When they jumped, the timing chain broke. That's the captain's pedal force only BTW, stoker's strength doesn't go through the timing chain at all. So Vails broke that chain all by himself. And it wasn't a tiny chainring, it was Campy 144 BCD, so we know it was at least a 41t, probably bigger. Him on a chainring half as big would have sent shrapnel into the bleachers!

Maybe the small rings were for the longer events with riders with more ordinary legs?
Steve in Peoria (no worries about me snapping chains)
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