Show your classic sports touring bicycle
#251
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I guess I wasn't absorbing the marketing much when "sports touring" was a thing so I hadn't really thought about it, but after reading the criteria in this thread I realized that most of my vintage bikes are sports tourers. For now I'll just post a picture of the one that's set up that way, my 1982 Specialized Sequoia:

I had to remove some material from the front fender to get it to fit between the fork blades, and these 700x32 tires are a tight fit with the front fender. Maybe it needs smaller wheels....

I had to remove some material from the front fender to get it to fit between the fork blades, and these 700x32 tires are a tight fit with the front fender. Maybe it needs smaller wheels....


#252
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Not sure if this fits the "sport tourer" category as it looks touristy, but it was marketed as a randonneur, so that is sportish isn't it?
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Well then you're just the person I need to talk to! I just ordered the pieces for a set of 650B wheels, but I hadn't decided which bike they'd end up on yet. I've been trying to decide between the Loup Loup Pass and the Babyshoe Pass. Do you think there's room for the Babyshoes on a Sequoia? Also, what do you think of the ride with the Loup Loups?
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#254
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Great question; go ahead and post it and explain why you think it belongs here. Waterfords are obviously beautiful bikes. The vast majority of bikes with cantilevers aren't really sports touring bikes; they are either touring bikes (and there is along thread for those) or cross bikes (there aren't a lot of vintage cross bikes out there). But it looks like your bike doesn't have the longish wheelbase of a true touring bike so go ahead and post,
.

For Cannondale Sport Touring bikes the frames were identical from the ST400 to the ST1000 with the difference being the ST800/1000 having cantis I believe. The ST800 with three water bottle cages, front and rear racks, and front and rear fenders, Brooks or Ideale saddle, with the Superbe Pro rear derailleur with the long GT cage and triple crank is a sleeping giant. It is a stronger frame than any then contemporary steel touring frame. It will survive being overloaded well beyond the point that any steel touring bike could manage before the down tube or top tube risks wrinkling. Overloading a steel touring bike ultimately lead to busting a lug, ignoring the frame flex that would make he bike almost unrideable and make steering/tracking just dangerous. Yep throw 400+ pounds of gear on a Cannondale ST frame and it won't blink. Try that with any steel touring bike and the chain stays and bottom bracket flex will have the rear tire rubbing. Steel touring bikes are like trucks with no effective payload, they can carry stuff if it doesn't weigh anything.
Yet that overloaded Cannondale ST can shed the panniers, remove the fenders and racks, fit some narrower tires at higher pressures, and then go on a competitive fast group ride. That Cannondale frame is going to be lighter, stiffer and faster than EVERY bike in vintage race bike peloton. All other things being equal, like fitness, it will sprint like a rocket, climb like a goat, and hammer like a runaway freight train on the flats compared to the Pinarellos, Merckxes, Cinellis, Olmos, and Colnagos in that vintage group. All things being equal, in terms of cyclists, and it wins every sprint, every climb, and every race in that group.
So that ST with cantilevers isn't a sport touring bike even though it is a better race bike than then contemporary steel steeds? Just because some ST 800/1000s came with actual racing components like Superbe Pro but with cantis too?
Please.
There is no difference between an ST 400 or ST 800 but price point, components, and calipers versus cantis. Yet the canti clad bike is faster than then contemporary steel race bikes, and a better stronger touring bike than anything else. But it can't be in your sport touring group? Why? It's faster and more capable of "sport" than any short reach common era vintage lightweight caliper steel race bike. In fact it's not even close.
All things equal, it would climb Alp d'huez finishing as the stage leader in 1983...then swap tires put the racks, fenders, panniers and the load back on to transition to the next stage town. If that ain't a sport tourer what is?
Brembo calipers and slotted and drilled rotors don't make a Ram truck with the same V-10 block, as in the Viper, a sports car! It's still just a truck.
So I'll offer an alternative spec:
Fits wide tires/racks (front AND rear)
Longer wheel base
Most be able to climb/sprint/accelerate like a race bike
Which means we're talking about...
huh, that leaves a handful of Kleins and Cannondale Sport Touring bikes. Bonus points if the racks, panniers, seat bags, handlebar bag, frame bags and backpack and sleeping bag are all vintage/classic Cannondale too.
Cause everything else is just everything else. There were and are not peers to the performance potential of Cannondale Sport Touring bikes. If they were Italian or Belgian they'd all be the Stradivarius bikes of C&V, and priceless.
Worthy of Campy Record 10 speed bits, just with the long cage and triple front derailleur choices
Last edited by mtnbke; 04-13-17 at 02:38 AM.
#255
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Another long, bizarre, anti-steel rant from mtnbike! I expect no less.

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#257
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Technically, except for the ST400, those are full blown touring bikes. ST stands for Super Touring, not Sport. Says so right in the Cannondale catalog. The ST400 with caliper's is sport touring (says so right in the catalog). Just saying, don't get upset.
#258
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When Cannondale brought the aluminum bicycle frame to levels of production before unseen by small volume builders like Cunningham and Klein market in 1983, the aluminum bicycle frame was called from the very beginning:
(wait for it)
https://vintagecannondale.com/year/1983/1983S.pdf
Every Cannondale started as a Sport Touring bike. Its what ST means and meant. Until they changed it that is. While every original Cannondale and ST bike is still a better race bike than any vintage lightweight steel bike, even with its longer wheelbase, it will prove itself to climb better, accelerate quicker, and jump in a sprint harder. Not bad for a Sport Touring bike. A better touring bike, and a faster race bike than any…well, race bike.
Every Cannondale was a Sport Touring, from the very beginning.
Read the 1983 Catalog where they introduce "the long awaited Sport Touring" bicycle. Yes later catalogs reference other variance in language, but ST for Cannondale always meant Sport Touring. The bikes didn't change, just some of the marketing material.
https://vintagecannondale.com/year/1983/1983.pdf
Congratulations in digging through the catalogs to try to find one nuanced example running contrary to the very history, reveal, and branding of EVERY initial bike. Alternative facts are popular these days. I see you're a fan.
Last edited by mtnbke; 04-13-17 at 08:12 PM.
#260
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I think your bike looks like a pretty cool sport touring bike.
Edit: Also, welcome to the forums!
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#261
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Yeah…you couldn't actually be more wrong. Actually I suspect you know you're wrong, but tried to sneak in a narrow contextual example that completely runs contrary to what EVERY Cannondale frame started out as! So either you're just wrong, or as I rather suspect, you were being actually intellectually dishonest and disingenuous.
Cannondale must have realized that their full on touring bikes were not sport tourers because they corrected their mistake

Now explain why they have the ST800 listed as a touring bike and, separately, the ST400 is listed as a sport touring bike? Hmmm?


#262
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The @mtnbke troll is back! Can't say we missed you.
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The @mtnbke troll is back! Can't say we missed you.
#265
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#266
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To me, a 'sports-tourer' is a frame with chainsays long enough ...that allows more than one finger-width between seat tube and tire -- let's say enough for fenders and... A full-on-dedicated tourer allows three... Who is with me???
#267
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This was supposed to be a thread with pics but then it got a bit blown up by one of my favorite BF posters, 
I have a bit of a thing going with Trek sports touring bikes. They really pushed the idea of geometry specific bikes (racing, touring, and sports touring). Plus I worked in a shop that sold a lot of Treks in the 80s so I really like the bikes. They're well made, have great paint jobs, and as easy as pie to work on. Here's a 1978 Trek 510 I picked up as found in the wild (full ishiwata 022 frameset and low temp silver brazed). I'm getting a kind of suntour vibe from this bike. I think it needs cyclone or vgt derailleurs and bar cons, a B17 saddle, plush 32c tires, and a triple:

I have a bit of a thing going with Trek sports touring bikes. They really pushed the idea of geometry specific bikes (racing, touring, and sports touring). Plus I worked in a shop that sold a lot of Treks in the 80s so I really like the bikes. They're well made, have great paint jobs, and as easy as pie to work on. Here's a 1978 Trek 510 I picked up as found in the wild (full ishiwata 022 frameset and low temp silver brazed). I'm getting a kind of suntour vibe from this bike. I think it needs cyclone or vgt derailleurs and bar cons, a B17 saddle, plush 32c tires, and a triple:
#268
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I'm going to move this forward with a 1981 Trek set up as a sport tourer. Please don't yell at me...

#269
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This was supposed to be a thread with pics but then it got a bit blown up by one of my favorite BF posters, 
I have a bit of a thing going with Trek sports touring bikes. They really pushed the idea of geometry specific bikes (racing, touring, and sports touring). Plus I worked in a shop that sold a lot of Treks in the 80s so I really like the bikes. They're well made, have great paint jobs, and as easy as pie to work on. Here's a 1978 Trek 510 I picked up as found in the wild (full ishiwata 022 frameset and low temp silver brazed). I'm getting a kind of suntour vibe from this bike. I think it needs cyclone or vgt derailleurs and bar cons, a B17 saddle, plush 32c tires, and a triple:

I have a bit of a thing going with Trek sports touring bikes. They really pushed the idea of geometry specific bikes (racing, touring, and sports touring). Plus I worked in a shop that sold a lot of Treks in the 80s so I really like the bikes. They're well made, have great paint jobs, and as easy as pie to work on. Here's a 1978 Trek 510 I picked up as found in the wild (full ishiwata 022 frameset and low temp silver brazed). I'm getting a kind of suntour vibe from this bike. I think it needs cyclone or vgt derailleurs and bar cons, a B17 saddle, plush 32c tires, and a triple:
#270
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I really dig that Trek chestnut color. I'm thinking of painting the 1979 510. The paint job is pretty solid on it (the paint on the downtube is pretty scratched up--you can't see it in the pic because it's on the other side--but that's easy to fix) but I'm bored with blue and I really like that chestnut color. But then it's only original once.
#271
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Good thread, lot of very nice bikes here. I never considered any of my bikes as sports tourers except for an '83 Trek 620 I just sold to a friend. After reading through I get it now. Here's my '75 Motobécane Grand Jubilé I rigged as a randonneur. I've posted a couple of other photos of it around, it's a recent build and I'm still enamored. 


#272
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Cannondale should do some repops on their luggage. They'd look good on pre-1983 steel sport touring bicycles.
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#273
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Love my Cannondale handle bar bag on my 77 Le Tour II. Wish I could find a blue one now.
Re pop idea sounds great!
Re pop idea sounds great!
#274
Senior Member
A very nice one indeed.
The Grand Jubile could even be called the ur sport-tourer that inspired the genre.
Then again most of the old French constucteur bikes were really set up as sport tourers too. To some degree sport tourer, randonneur and audax all mean the same thing.
Anyhow, I shall enter my Mercian, classic but not vintage, as seen below. Even though this is technically a full touring bike, it is set up and used as a sport bike. All it needs to tour is for me to bolt on the rear rack and attach a handlebar bag. That makes it a sport tourer right?

Then again most of the old French constucteur bikes were really set up as sport tourers too. To some degree sport tourer, randonneur and audax all mean the same thing.
Anyhow, I shall enter my Mercian, classic but not vintage, as seen below. Even though this is technically a full touring bike, it is set up and used as a sport bike. All it needs to tour is for me to bolt on the rear rack and attach a handlebar bag. That makes it a sport tourer right?
Likes For Salamandrine:
#275
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Anyhow, I shall enter my Mercian, classic but not vintage, as seen below. Even though this is technically a full touring bike, it is set up and used as a sport bike. All it needs to tour is for me to bolt on the rear rack and attach a handlebar bag. That makes it a sport tourer right?

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1987 Mercian Pro, 1985 Shogun 500, 197? Falcon San Remo, 1972 Peugeot PX-10, 1972 Schwinn Paramount P13-9, 1971 Peugeot PX-10, 1971 Raleigh International, 1970 Raleigh Professional Mark I
Curator/Team Mechanic: 2016 Dawes Streetfighter, 1984 Lotus Eclair, 1975 Motobecane Jubile Mixte, 1974 Raleigh Sports, 1973 Free Spirit Ted Williams, 1972 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Philips Sport