Welcome, jerks.


Yeah, I got the fever. Three or four years ago, a rabid, red-eyed zombie sank its rotten teeth into my arm and thus I was infected with a peculiar strain of irrational obsession. Since then I have breathed, eaten, and slept bikes and almost nothing else. Maybe a vaccine will be invented, or maybe it'll simply pass, but until then I'm a slave to my compulsion to buy, transport, take apart, degrease, scour, lube, polish, assemble, tune, tighten, align, wax, buff, and yes, ride, ride, ride these magical two-wheeled machines.

So, the idea is, on this page I'm going to post pictures and perhaps stories of bikes that I've refurbished and ridden or ones that are in the process or recently completed. Maybe it'll expand from there. We'll see, I guess.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Austro Daimler Mixte (Michelle)

I bought this late '70s Austro-Daimler mixte on ebay from a local seller. She got stripped down to the frame and rebuilt as a comfort-minded townie. The frame had a couple of interesting peculiarities worth nothing: 1) a really looong wheelbase of 107.5cm, owing mostly to the stretched out effective top tube; 2) a really short head tube that placed the top of the headset something like two inches below the top of the seat lug! The long wheel base didn't bother me at all, but that seat tube-head tube differential meant that I needed a really long stem to bring those handlebars up above saddle height. Nitto Technomic!

One of the nice things about these old frames is that they tend to have ample clearance for (relatively) wide tires. Cream Delta Cruisers!







I thought I'd use this build to try out a Gyes leather saddle. Gyes is a Taiwanese alternative to Brooks. Most Gyes saddles cost about 60 or 70% of what an "equivalent" Brooks costs. This one proved extremely tough. Not at all comfortable after a few miles. Some neats-foot oil helped with that issue, but when I sold the bike, there was still plenty of breaking-in to be done.

The MAFAC Racer brakes I chose not only look cool, they also allowed me to dial in the perfect length of straddle cable so that the yoke clears the seat tube while providing ample braking power. (The original Weinmann brake, like most centerpulls, had a fixed-length straddle cable that was way too long and sapped nearly all the potential braking power from the caliper.) The reach of the brake arms was a tad shy of ideal in the rear but angling the pads downward a little proved to be an acceptable work-around.



Ouch!

This had to have hurt. In case you can't quite tell, the back end of this seat post is sheared clean off. Actually, not so clean. What I don't understand is why the seatpost was still in this chained-up bike. Had the accident just happened, or was the owner now stubbornly riding around town like this, unable to sit down? I've seen some people remove their seat/seatpost as an anti-theft measure, so was this one guy's way of plugging up the resulting hole in case of rain?


Sunday, June 3, 2012

A fine pair of stallions

When this '86 Pro Miyata (background) passed through my hands, I couldn't resist a few gratuitous shots with its big brother (my '85 Team Miyata, foreground).



Fuji S10-S LTD

This late '70s Fuji came to me for townie conversion. Her current owner had consulted me months earlier about the purchase. I said go for it, and let me know when you want to overhaul it!


She got Soma Oxford bars (very similar to the Nitto Albatross), Velo Orange fenders, MKS Touring Lite pedals, and a sprung Brooks B67. Fitting those fenders in with the tight (~5mm) clearance was no picnic. It involved machining custom hardware for the job, the questionable use of a hammer, and of course copious use of the f-word.






What happens when you swap brake lever hardware...

This is what happens when you're not careful about swapping hardware from one brake lever to another. Turns out those fixing bolts come in slightly different lengths, tailored to the levers with which they're meant to be paired. Now my precious Nitto drops may be destined for a flop-and-chop and a second life as bullhorns.



Miyata Alumicross

This one is an '89 Miyata Alumicross, one of those "screwed-and-glued" aluminum frames, that I built up as a fast-n-comfy get-around-towner. The story goes that the frame was ridden by a pro mountain biker in the early '90s and then boxed up for a while. That fellow later opened (or helped run?)  Recycle Bicycle, a nice little used bike shop here in Berkeley that, sadly, just closed down last month. Before that, he sold his Alumicross frame to a fellow restoration enthusiast who had more enthusiasm than free time. I traded him a Surly rack for the frame and promptly turned out this build using spare parts from the parts bin. The paint looked so gnarly when I got the frame that I feared I had gotten the sour end of the trade, but a good deep polishing took most of the scrapes and scratches right out. The creamy tires don't exactly match the pearlescent paint, and the black stem, pedals, and seatpost are stark color contrasts, but I felt like it all came together in a grungy, don't-give-a-$hit kind of way. I like to think that the young gent who bought this one was inspired to grow a handlebar moustache to match the moustache handlebars.





For this one, I followed ol' GP's suggestion of using non-aero levers with the moustache bar/cantilever brake combo. Oddly, I noticed no improvement in braking as a result.