Show me your English "Club" bikes
#26
aka Tom Reingold
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And the card is about the Bike Cult show!

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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
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Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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#28
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My go to bike when I am riding alone. 70's Dawes Galaxy , fixed.
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nlerner, I love your Super Course conversion. This is a dream project I've been thinking about for years. I'd love to know what you needed to do to fit the AM hub into the SC frame.
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I have since sold it, but for many years I was the custodian of this c.1962 Dawes Realmrider. This one is unusual in having apparently been built from the start for a Sturmey-Archer FW 4-speed gear hub, with no derailleur braze-on fittings. No tubing decals, but it was decent stuff and rode very nicely. I am told the lugs are Ekla Racelites, and they were used by Dawes on several models through the years. Pictured with modern bars, stem, and B.17 with the original, badly rusted steel rims having been replaced with Mavic 27-in alloy units and the utterly lovely Panaracer Pasela tyres.


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#31
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Super Course frame popped up on my local CL, if you want to attempt the project, @BigChief. Paint is rough, and I don't know your size, but the price is right, and it comes with an early Dura Ace crankset.
Raleigh Supercourse frame/fork
Raleigh Supercourse frame/fork

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#32
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Where's @AZORCH with his Hobbs of Barbican?
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#33
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Where's @AZORCH with his Hobbs of Barbican?

...oh...but you probably wanted a clear photograph, huh?

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Super Course frame popped up on my local CL, if you want to attempt the project, @BigChief. Paint is rough, and I don't know your size, but the price is right, and it comes with an early Dura Ace crankset.
Raleigh Supercourse frame/fork
Raleigh Supercourse frame/fork
#35
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Is that the KC downtown airport? Between the planes landing on one side, the highway on the other side, and the busy railyard just beyond that, that ride seems...unpleasant. Love that bike, though.
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#36
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I'd need to know how the O.L.D on a Super Course would work with a 4 1/2" SA 3 speed hub. But apparently, it can be done. I've also heard that you can use a crank with a 10 speed sprocket with a single speed chain, but I have no experience with this myself. Just wondering what problems I would have to overcome with a Super Course 3 speed conversion.
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You called it right - it is the downtown airport. And it's actually not unpleasant at all...lots of neat planes, some vintage, out there. And a lot of urban cyclists go out to do loops. I beat them all of course. (In my dreams.)
#38
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I'd need to know how the O.L.D on a Super Course would work with a 4 1/2" SA 3 speed hub. But apparently, it can be done. I've also heard that you can use a crank with a 10 speed sprocket with a single speed chain, but I have no experience with this myself. Just wondering what problems I would have to overcome with a Super Course 3 speed conversion.
Most Sturmey-Archer hub installations are around 114 mm spacing.
The axles generally came in either short (5 3/4") or long (6 1/4") sizes. The longer size will generally work on a 120 mm frame, just add enough spacer washers to fill up the space.
Beyond 120, with typical 6 mm thick dropouts, it gets pretty dodgy.
If you don't already have them, you should pick up a pair of the HMW494 axle washers designed to fit the wider dropout slots.
See: Sturmey-Archer Hubs and Spare Parts from Harris Cyclery
Sheldon "Epicyclic" Brown
The axles generally came in either short (5 3/4") or long (6 1/4") sizes. The longer size will generally work on a 120 mm frame, just add enough spacer washers to fill up the space.
Beyond 120, with typical 6 mm thick dropouts, it gets pretty dodgy.
If you don't already have them, you should pick up a pair of the HMW494 axle washers designed to fit the wider dropout slots.
See: Sturmey-Archer Hubs and Spare Parts from Harris Cyclery
Sheldon "Epicyclic" Brown
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#39
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#41
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#42
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I posted this on the "Are you looking for one of these" thread, but I think it belongs here, too. Beautiful frame.
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#43
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My Claud Butler is a similar bike; road geometry with brake bridge and fork crown drilled for centerpull brakes, but track ends, round fork blades. This model (Holdsworth-built Olympic Sprint from the mid 60's) usually had fender eyelets front and back, either omitted on mine at customer's request, or perhaps drewed by a previous owner.
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#44
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Seems like a pretty fuzzy distinction to me, @rhm. If club bikes also came with fixed/single hubs as an option, is the only difference then whether the frame had track ends or road dropouts?
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Seems like a pretty fuzzy distinction to me, @rhm. If club bikes also came with fixed/single hubs as an option, is the only difference then whether the frame had track ends or road dropouts?
But the fact is they did make these "road-path" frames, as such, so evidently there was a distinction. It rides like a road bike, but it's styled like a track bike. Here's the 1966 catalog page for my Olympic Sprint (but the photo shows an earlier model; the ornate fork crown had been discontinued by this time).

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#46
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'58 Raleigh Superbe, original except bag support. SW hub

'57 Canadian Sports, flip flop

'37 CCM Road Racer, flip flop, closer to road/path

'57 Canadian Sports, flip flop
'37 CCM Road Racer, flip flop, closer to road/path

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#47
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Neat. I'd pay 10 pounds for one.
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#48
Bicycle Repair Man !!!
Seems like a pretty fuzzy distinction to me, @rhm. If club bikes also came with fixed/single hubs as an option, is the only difference then whether the frame had track ends or road dropouts?
Single speed and track hubs work fine in horizontal dropouts for road bicycles that have more clearance to the seat tube, track bicycles tend to be pretty tight so a track end is favourable to set the wheel position as close to the seat tube as possible.
#49
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My Lenton has horizontal dropouts but was offered and sold as a fixed gear with an option to have a 3 speed hub fitted.
Single speed and track hubs work fine in horizontal dropouts for road bicycles that have more clearance to the seat tube, track bicycles tend to be pretty tight so a track end is favourable to set the wheel position as close to the seat tube as possible.
Single speed and track hubs work fine in horizontal dropouts for road bicycles that have more clearance to the seat tube, track bicycles tend to be pretty tight so a track end is favourable to set the wheel position as close to the seat tube as possible.
I know they were marketed differently (and maybe existed in different periods?), I just don't see a functional difference.
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#50
aka Tom Reingold
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I notice our style of writing becomes British in this thread.

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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
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“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.