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I ride these things, too. Here are some photos of
my favorite
rides. 2005 North American HandBuilt
Bicycle Show 11/13/05 First Austin "Old Bikes" meeting Austin frame builders: http://www.crumptoncycles.com/http://www.willitsbikes.com/ Skip Hujsak has closed his shop, and is watching the river flow. Whit Moyer is now helping to irradiate the earth http://www.flickr.com/photos/moyercycles/2603698503/ And our importer: http://www.wmlewisimports.com/ |












A week after I found the TREK below, I found this 1968(?) Dawes
Galaxy. Very original except for the rear wheel and
defailers. I've built it up pretty stock to celebrate how my
Dawes Galaxy tourer (below) started out.
Detail shots of my Dawes Galaxy


1986 Cannondale SR400 I'd
never seen a METALLIC PLUM Cannondale before. Suntour Cyclone
defailers and an amazingly clean bike for being 20 years
old. Looks like it had only had a couple of years of use, and
still has the Cannondale "The Aluminum Advantage" handlebars.

Cannondale 2.8 R900 (1992). I bought the frame at a garage
sale, and
assembled the rest of the bike from my pile of parts. The bike
weights around 20.6 pounds and is Shimano 600 and Modolo
equipped.

Another "new" bike, this time a 1990 Cannondale T700 Tourer.
It had been used as a road bike, and I've added the racks and fenders,
upgraded the wheel set, and intend to continue prepping it as a loaded
touring machine.

1984 Univega
Gran Sprint - S
Found it at a garage sale, after the previous owner had let the
tires rot off of it. I know why; it came stock with sew-ups,
probably
one
of the last low cost bikes with sew-ups. I redid the wheels with
Mavic aero clincher rims.
It was supposed to be their "club racer" and while it is nice and stiff
thanks to the triple butted tube, the geometry is pretty relaxed for a
racer.
It does make a nice recreational rider, though. This bike was
built by Miyata for Lawee (the distributor).
Detail shots of my Univega
Wile E.
Guerciotti
An early 70's Eddy Merckx.
This bike was built by Falcon.
I have upgraded it with all sorts of interesting components, including
GB engraved bars, Universal Model 61 center pull brakes, Campy
Valentino
deraileurs, Modolo
levers, Brooks saddle, Carnielli "cookie cutter"
stem,
Nissi Toro rims, Nervar crank, and even Heuret thumb screw axles and a
latch-clip bottle holder with an aluminum bottle. It's heavy,
but who cares?
Detail shots of my Merckx

My 1974 Ellis-Briggs.
This was my first quality frame (1987), and is still one of the best
balance of
handling
and comfort of any bike I've ever had.
I've probably put between 30 and 40K miles on it.

This is REAL retro. My 1969(?) Dawes
Galaxy tourer. Everything's been upgraded to mid 80's stuff including
SunTour barends and deraileurs, 600 crank, Phil Wood hubs, and Weinmann
concave rims . Latest tour was a overnighter
to Lake Georgetown.
Detail shots of my Dawes Galaxy

I finished building this up as my "city bike" for the JingleBell ride
2005. Raleigh Technium (Tange Prestige/7005 mix) MT500
frame with a pile of various parts including Deore drivetrain and Rock
Shox Mag21 forks. Seven speeds on the rear with a thumbshifter
set up as a jockey shift "selector" on what is virtually a single speed.

1991 Miyata Elevation 5000 that I'm building up as my offroad tourer.
Deatail shots of the Miyata
1995 Parkpre Comp Limited. Just for riding. Must have
had an easy life - one little skuff on the decals.
What's a Parkpre? http://www.parkpre.com/history.htm

This is my Columbia
Five Star General. I think that it's circa 1953 from some of the
component
dates. Originally it used 27.5" clincher wheels, and the front wheel
included
a generator hub and the rear had a Brapton three speed. I still have
the
parts, but replaced them with 26" wheels from a Raleigh three speed,
and
used the FRONT brake from the Raleigh too. Really interesting to see an
American company try to meld the Continental three speed technology
into
an American arch frame.

Finally, a Markward Rekord folding bike. Those original 20" Carlisle
wide whites are probably worth a lot more than the bike itself!