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• #2
Get a front brake (tektro usually fine). Sort out the cable housing length for the rear one. Saddle angle. If you just need new pads for the rear check on ebay to find some identically shaped ones. Brands like clarks are usually safe bets.
Consider switching it to singlespeed if you haven't ridden fixed before and find it awkward / hard.
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• #3
A front brake is far more use than a rear brake, sort that first, you'll need a specific caliper for the front, you can't just use the rear. As said above. You can just replace the pads with an Allen key and some practice
Handlebars are sized on overall width and diameter of tube used. The diameter has to match the current handlebar if you want to keep the same headset ( you probably do.)
Rising fixed without foot retention is considered unnecessarily dangerous, straps or clipless pedals/shoes are typical solutions.
Shopping list:
Front caliper
Brake pads to match
Foot retention if fixed
Allen key set
Spanner set
Front lever, housing/outer, inner/cable. You could just repurpose the rear cabling and ride front brake only. Quite common.
Track pump
Tyre levers
Spare tube
Decent tyres, optional for now.
£100 ish without tyres and lock.
Another £100 for those. -
• #4
You need to add foot retention to that shopping list.
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• #5
Noted
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• #6
Stick a post in the wanted section and you may get the right/better parts you need.
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• #8
Nothing looks wrong from here, just a hunch they could be improved, I go for full puncture protection as I'm not too bothered about weight.
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• #11
https://www.cyclesurgery.com/p/shimano-r450-front-brake-caliper-R7334044.html?colour=109
Front caliper, £20, collect from central London...
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• #13
The seat looks from the pictures to be quite nose down.
Also is it high enough? You’ll find that most people ride with more seatpost showing, you can find some guides to Simple bike fit on YouTube. If you can’t raise your saddle more than it is now then it’s likely that the frame is too big for you in general (too long)
If you’re considering bullhorn bars then you’ll likely need new brake levers if/when you switch to those, either “aero” ones that go in the end of the bar or ones that clamp in the centre of the bar next to the stem. (Personally I’d keep the risers)
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• #15
In case you're not aware, worth seeing if you can get one of these £50 vouchers:
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• #16
The diameter of the central fat piece needs to match the diameter of your headset, where it's held, to the mm.
It looks like the rest of the central part tapers which makes it unsuitable to position a break lever there.
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• #18
Why not both? You can get a pull through level for close to the stem that joins to a bull end lever
I would say the most important lever is the one near where your hands are when riding cautiously, eg in heavy, slow traffic.
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• #19
You may need to explain a pull through lever...
It allows you to have two levers controlling the same brake mechanisms, with the same cable. The cable runs from the lever at the end of the bull horn, and then through a second lever on the central horizontal but of the bars, before heading on to the brake.
As it happens, I am stood next to a bike with a similar setup, but on drop bars. The cable runs under the handlebar tape from the hood lever and then pops out before going into the cross top lever and then on to the brake.
I'll put a pic of it here.
Ignore the cable coming out of the side of the hood lever. That is for gear changing.
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Hi all - I'm a newbie to LFGSS but also Fixed Gear riding, so be kind!
I'm a newbie to Fixed Gear riding - so be kind!
With the pandemic and the trains being generally useless, I bought this Fixed Gear bike this morning second-hand via Facebook Marketplace.
At some point, ideally, I'd want to change the handlebars to a bullhorn bar, but other than that there isn't anything else I can think of.
Thanks a lot in advance!
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