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• #952
Ahh gotcha! drain pipe is new too me
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• #953
I forgot to post at the time, but I spotted this on holiday in France over the summer.
Reynolds 853, Rolhoff, S&S couplers - judging by the prices on Orbit Tandems website this looks like about £6k-£7k's worth of kit!
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• #954
Rescued an old 80's Dawes Horizon the other day. New pilots BB required but its going. It's even got a rear drag drum brake for those "epic" descents, probably not required in the midlands!
140mm rear spacing throws up a couple of minor issues for updating to a more modern rear wheel/cassette to move away from 6 speed down tube shifters.
Still, its all good fun and having raced a 10 as a stoker a few years ago, my appetite is good for more!
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• #955
You'd be surprised how useful a drag brake is.
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• #956
Amen. Use ours as a parking brake almost constantly.
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• #957
I have had it on a couple of times to be fair. Not sure of the condition of the shoes inside but it does work.
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• #958
BTW, would a 135mm MTB 29er wheel work in a 140mm rear end? Frame is 501
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• #959
That would be fine. JD Tandems sell 140mm hubs, that's pretty standard size for tandems.
If your frame really is 80s I'm surprised is 140mm, I thought that was a 00s improvment. -
• #960
So you don't think pinching 2.5mm each side would be an issue?
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• #962
In the long run I'd try and respace it to whatever hubs you're going to be using - AIUI the residual stresses in the chain/seatstays and non-parallel dropouts can cause broken axles and other problems if heavily loaded, and for a tandem that goes double. But I may well be being overly paranoid!
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• #963
It's only ever going to be used for pootling around the lanes for now. I hear what youre saying though. A 140mm hub would keep everything in line, I just haven't got the readies to shell out on such a wheel.
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• #964
It's fine. When you (inevitably) break enough spokes to decide you want a new wheel built, get a 140mm hub. It's fine 'til then.
Is it a freehub style (with a cassette) or a screw-on style with a freewheel? If the latter then anything heavily laden will probably write-off the axle soon enough anyway. It won't be you, it's just the limitations of the design. Freehubs FTW! -
• #965
Its a screw on 6 speed.
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• #966
Then a freehub would be a good upgrade. Squeezing the frame by 5mm is fine.
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• #967
That's my way of thinking. Be nice to have something that gives a better choice of gearing for us.
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• #968
I bought this Paris tandem in August as a frame. It turns out to date to 1949. Handily I already had an original 26" wheel with 1949 Sturmey Archer AW hub. I managed to get hold of a Cyclo Standard derailleur complete with cables and lever, and Cyclo 2 sprocket adapter. Unfortunately the cables don't reach far enough, so if anyone has a tandem length Cyclo Standard cable let me know.
I am considering building a 27" wheelset, replacement saddles and fitting mudguards as future upgrades.
All I have to do now is convince my wife to ride as stoker!
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• #969
Another..
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• #970
Another
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• #971
Amazing
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• #972
Selling my Dawes Super Galaxy - £250
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• #973
Bargain!
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• #974
just aquired almost the same thing but no drum brake fitted, eh oop, neither of us ‘av ridden tandem before,,,,,,eeeek
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• #975
Went on holiday with my wife and took our drop-bar mtb tandem out. We only got so far down that descent I’m going to go back on the 29er to do again though
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I read Genevieve on the "mudguard", it was "The Higgins Ultralite" on the drain pipe (aka keel- or boom-tube) I couldn't read in the wide shots.