So onto the Raleigh: This frame originally started out in my hands about 2 years ago, and became the first birthday present for m'lady (by first birthday present I mean the first present I'd bought for m'lady, and not that it was her first birthday). Over the course of about a year, it went through many, many changes to make it the road bike she wanted. From this:
To the frame being powdercoated:
To adding bright orange cables and bartape.
Sorry this is the only picture I actually have of the orange stuff. |
Rat-cage pedals were swapped out for platforms, bar tape went from orange to purple to orange, cassettes and chains were replaced.
The brakes went from old school pain-in-the-arse-to-set-up Weinmann centrepulls to slick Tektro extra-long reach sidepulls, with the intention of swapping out the 27" wheels for 700C's in the future when the time and money was right.
This bike was built up from scratch, using any parts I had spare, a mashup of mountain and road bike parts; this bike gave me every problem with sizing I never ever asked for.
It was the biggest pain in the arse that took weekly sessions of messinabout, until finally it ran smoothly, and the problems tapered off.
This was about a month before we found a new(er) road bike in her size that would do the job better...
The analogy that sprung to mind... |
So after her pedals, saddle and handlebars were swapped over, I was left with a weird mish-mashy thing that resembled a bike and needed to be dealt with.
Although I count the wheels I built as a success (7 speed mountain bike hubs built into 27" rims), the frame didn't have a derailleur hanger, and the gears were always the problem I was trying to fix. Although it was kind of a shame to waste a good cassette hub, I decided that the easiest way to get this bike
So, after giving the frame a Halfords rattlecan paint and lacquer job, I put the frame and wheels together with some upside-down Humpert Toulouse bars, as seen previously on The Commodore.
The rattlecan job wasn't perfect, but the powder coat was pretty chewed up in places, and made for a good undercoat.
The saddle was originally from Misty the mixte, and although a prestigious Brooks, in all fairness it's a standard black vinyl seat.
I used one of the aforementioned Weinmann centre pull brakes on the front, but because I wanted the cable routing to be easier and shorter, I had to use a sidepull brake on the back: By flipping the barrel adjuster and pinch bolt round, it meant the cable could come down the frame and up from underneath the brake (fairly standard routing on stepthrough ladies frames).
The GB Synchron sidepull on the rear was donated by a guy at work. Weirdly it's an early version of a dual pivot sidepull brake, and works pretty well.
The brake levers were new from ebay, and the grips came from the previously mentioned BSA Metro I tarted up.
The singlespeed conversion kit is basically a pack of spacers and one cog, which meant that the chainline can be aligned pretty easily. The hubs are old Shimano Exage ones back from when Mighty Martha II was a Marin, laced into some Rigida alloy 27 x 1 1/4" rims.
The single crankset was bought new from ebay as was the chain, and the pedals are some old ones I had kicking around. The 46t chainring and 16t cog in the back gives a fairly easygoing gearing.
The SKS mudgaurds were left over from when the bike was m'lady's commuter, so the only other thing to buy was new brake cables (Jagwire bright red to smash off the "Ford Aquamarine Frost" paintjob) and some cable clips that I found on ebay.
So there we go; a fairly bright start to 2015, and with the bulk of the parts ready to go, "The Tangerine Dream" shouldn't be far behind.
Holy Spokes, Batman |
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