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Old 04-25-06 | 08:58 PM
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luker
juneeaa memba!
Sheldon Brown Memorial - Donating
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 5,631
Likes: 5
From: boogled up in...Idaho!

Bikes: Crap. The box is not big enough...

Old parts tell a story...

Last week I had the interesting experience of refurbishing and reusing a super record group that I took off of my racing bike in the late '80's. I decided that the group was certainly good enough to use on a rider, and mostly it was just dirty. But bicycle forensics is becoming a knee-jerk reflex for me, and I couldn't help but notice some things about the younger bike rider that used to use these parts in races. Some things that I certainly don't recall, and might be embarrassed to have 'em pointed out by someone else.

First, the guy spent much more time on the 42 than the 53. A lot more time, because the original campy ring had been replaced with a specialized, and the specialized was pretty much worn out too. The big ring looks pretty much spotless...hmmmm. Maybe I wasn't so tough, or maybe I just turned 'em over at 130 rpm all of the time. On a more positive note, the brake shoes were hardly worn at all. Fearless descender, too dumb to put on brakes in the crits, or what?

The seatpost is in really good shape, except some moron etched two different seat height marks into it. The second mark is about an inch lower than my current riding position, and the first mark is THREE inches lower! I know that it didn't go in a bigger frame; I still own the frame. I didn't grow taller, either. So that means I used to ride with my seatpost three inches further in the frame! Man, I don't want to think about what that fred looked like...

While the brake shoes look nearly new, the front brake bolt was bent about fifteen degrees out of straight. No marks on the caliper itself. How the heck did that happen? Two of the shoes were reversed, so that a pad from both brakes could have gone shooting out into space when I most needed it. Why, oh why, did I do that? Oh, yeah, and the levers are totally wasted. Hit the deck so many times that I just replaced 'em. Didn't want to hurt my fingers for the sake of nostalgia.

I can remember the guy at the bike shop rebuilding my rear derailleur after a major collision with a St. Bernard...but the derailleur shows no signs of rework. Actually looks pretty good. Do you think he just sold the young bozo a new one and told him it was reworked? dunno...

That's all the bad stuff. The good news is that, cleaned with a little Mother's, and the trashed stuff replaced with working parts, the group works just like new! All told, it was a pretty good investment in 1984...
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