jyl
04-30-12, 03:56 PM
Late last year, I bought a 1975 (?) Peugeot UO-8 for my daughter. It was old, but rideable and still being actively ridden. I did a minimal amount of fixing up – cleaned and lubed the drivetrain, installed a used Terry seat, fitted new brake pads, made some adjustments and re-wrapped the bars – but nothing else, since I wasn’t convinced she would even ride the thing.
It was a shaky start. She knew how to ride a bicycle, but not well and not a ten-speed. At first there was much wobbling around and “I’ll just walk/take the bus/get a ride/stay home”. In recent months, however, she’s really taken to her bicycle, the freedom and fun it affords, and the miraculous ability to transform a hour’s tedious walk into 15 minutes’ breezy pedaling.
Now my daughter comes home from school, gets her bike from the garage, and rides herself to the vintage clothing boutiques, grocery store, ice cream shop, bookstore, etc. We still have rules about riding after dark (verboten), she’s not willing to ride on busy streets or cross the bridges yet (that’s okay with me), and for her recent photography class assignment, she did an picture essay on Portland’s ghost bicycles which provided all sorts of teachable moments on safe riding in traffic.
Last weekend, we went to Mt. Tabor, which is the closest convenient riding hill in my neighborhood. The route up the west side is roughly 280 vertical feet in 0.85 miles, or 12-13% grade. Usually a beginning rider has a pretty hard time getting up the hill. My daughter struggled the first time up, but after she realized that she could do it and the mental chains were broken, her second lap was pretty easy. Ah, to have the natural strength of a 15 y/o.
Naturally she has been bugging me to fix up her bike, and as I’m almost done with fixing up her little brother’s 1971 Peugeot G50 (thread coming soon), my thoughts are turning to the UO-8. What should we do with it?
Pictures of the bike are here: http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread.php/792854-My-Daughter-s-quot-New-quot-UO8?
Intended use: Fun riding around town. Light errands and shopping. Casual weekend rides, maybe 10-20 miles at first. Next year, maybe riding to school where the bike will be U-locked on an outside rack. Probably not going to see a lot of grim night death rides in the rain at 35F – frizzes the hair, you know – but bike and rider will likely be caught out in light showers and after dusk, no matter how mad dad gets.
Budget: Let’s call it a couple hundred bucks. I overspent on the G50 :)
700C alloy rims, like a basic Sun rim? (Not sure if the Mafac Racer brakes will still reach) Shiny fenders? Porteur front rack? (Never had one of those – are they better than rear racks?) Different bars (how can you have a porteur rack with drop bars?) Inexpensive, not very steal-worthy, LED head-and-taillights? Change out the plastic Simplex derailleurs before they fail, or wait for them to fail? She has requested brake levers on the bar tops (extensions or cross levers), and really wants better braking.
Insipration pictures or threads would be very welcome!
Wild card: Daughter is going away to a camp in the Sierra mountains for the summer. Yes, her first paying job, she’ll be a camp counselor which in this case means working in the kitchen and maybe the kid’s center, living in the tent cabins with the other teenagers, and hopefully having a great time (and they even have wireless, donchaknow). I haven’t cleared this with the camp director, but if permitted I might bring the bicycle to camp for her. Not that bicycle riding is permitted in the camp (it is not), or that there is any legal single-track there (none AFAIK), but the nearest grocery store is about 2 miles of mountain road away, and it seems to me that having some way to get out of the camp and explore the (paved) back roads might be pretty nice. Of course, the nearest bike mechanic will be 100 miles away, so she'll have to learn how to change a flat and use/carry basic bike tools. Anyway, if we do this, does that change anything?
It was a shaky start. She knew how to ride a bicycle, but not well and not a ten-speed. At first there was much wobbling around and “I’ll just walk/take the bus/get a ride/stay home”. In recent months, however, she’s really taken to her bicycle, the freedom and fun it affords, and the miraculous ability to transform a hour’s tedious walk into 15 minutes’ breezy pedaling.
Now my daughter comes home from school, gets her bike from the garage, and rides herself to the vintage clothing boutiques, grocery store, ice cream shop, bookstore, etc. We still have rules about riding after dark (verboten), she’s not willing to ride on busy streets or cross the bridges yet (that’s okay with me), and for her recent photography class assignment, she did an picture essay on Portland’s ghost bicycles which provided all sorts of teachable moments on safe riding in traffic.
Last weekend, we went to Mt. Tabor, which is the closest convenient riding hill in my neighborhood. The route up the west side is roughly 280 vertical feet in 0.85 miles, or 12-13% grade. Usually a beginning rider has a pretty hard time getting up the hill. My daughter struggled the first time up, but after she realized that she could do it and the mental chains were broken, her second lap was pretty easy. Ah, to have the natural strength of a 15 y/o.
Naturally she has been bugging me to fix up her bike, and as I’m almost done with fixing up her little brother’s 1971 Peugeot G50 (thread coming soon), my thoughts are turning to the UO-8. What should we do with it?
Pictures of the bike are here: http://www.bikeforums.net/showthread.php/792854-My-Daughter-s-quot-New-quot-UO8?
Intended use: Fun riding around town. Light errands and shopping. Casual weekend rides, maybe 10-20 miles at first. Next year, maybe riding to school where the bike will be U-locked on an outside rack. Probably not going to see a lot of grim night death rides in the rain at 35F – frizzes the hair, you know – but bike and rider will likely be caught out in light showers and after dusk, no matter how mad dad gets.
Budget: Let’s call it a couple hundred bucks. I overspent on the G50 :)
700C alloy rims, like a basic Sun rim? (Not sure if the Mafac Racer brakes will still reach) Shiny fenders? Porteur front rack? (Never had one of those – are they better than rear racks?) Different bars (how can you have a porteur rack with drop bars?) Inexpensive, not very steal-worthy, LED head-and-taillights? Change out the plastic Simplex derailleurs before they fail, or wait for them to fail? She has requested brake levers on the bar tops (extensions or cross levers), and really wants better braking.
Insipration pictures or threads would be very welcome!
Wild card: Daughter is going away to a camp in the Sierra mountains for the summer. Yes, her first paying job, she’ll be a camp counselor which in this case means working in the kitchen and maybe the kid’s center, living in the tent cabins with the other teenagers, and hopefully having a great time (and they even have wireless, donchaknow). I haven’t cleared this with the camp director, but if permitted I might bring the bicycle to camp for her. Not that bicycle riding is permitted in the camp (it is not), or that there is any legal single-track there (none AFAIK), but the nearest grocery store is about 2 miles of mountain road away, and it seems to me that having some way to get out of the camp and explore the (paved) back roads might be pretty nice. Of course, the nearest bike mechanic will be 100 miles away, so she'll have to learn how to change a flat and use/carry basic bike tools. Anyway, if we do this, does that change anything?
Bikeforums.net is a forum about nothing but bikes. Our community can help you find information about hard-to-find and localized information like bicycle tours, specialties like where in your area to have your recumbent bike serviced, or what are the best bicycle tires and seats for the activities you use your bike for.