Post your vintage British Bike
#26
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Join Date: Apr 2017
Location: Los Angeles, CA
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Bikes: 1964 Legnano Roma Olympiade, 1973 Raleigh Super Course, 1978 Raleigh Super Course, 1978 Peugeot PR10, 2002 Specialized Allez, 2007 Specialized Roubaix, 2013 Culprit Croz Blade
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1978 Raleigh Super Course, bought as a frame, BB, fork and bars for $20. Original paint and decals. Fun bike.

1973 Raleigh Super Course, rebuilt and restored from a scrapped and abandoned bare frame. My first ever build, still love riding it after 4 years.
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#28
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Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
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#29
Senior Member
This one is en route to me. 1955 Indian Scout, made by Phillips for Indian motorcycle dealers.



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#30
Full Member
In the early 80's one of the other shop owners I rode with had a Gilmour tandem. Beautiful blue and gold and just primo workmanship.
#31
Senior Member
Well, I just bought another one! LOL 1984 Raleigh Marathon. I've been reading a book about the Raleigh company, so this one caught my eye. It's in great shape.

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#32
Senior Member
Heres another Raleigh!
1974 Pro
1974 Pro

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#33
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Mine and my daughter's.



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#34
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Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Calgary
Posts: 657
Bikes: Condor, Cinelli SC, MKM Metcalfe, Peugeot AE08, Bianchi, Cougar, Miyata, Harry Hall, Holdsworth Special, Raleigh Int'l, Le Croco, Bob Jackson, Zeus
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67 Condor

76 Condor

75 MKM Metcalfe BAR

80’s Holdsworth Special

80’s Cougar
80’s Harry Hall

74 international

80’s Harry Hall
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#35
2k miles from the midwest
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Washington
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Bikes: ~'75 Colin Laing, '80s Schwinn SuperSport 650b, ex-Backroads ti project...
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As found pics of the Falcon I bought this fall.



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#37
Senior Member
Last edited by Big Block; 01-21-21 at 02:04 PM.
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#38
Senior Member
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#39
Senior Member
My Harry Quinn is a '74 Tourist, with a single rear shifter boss, so maybe built for an internal rear. Perfect for a 1x build. I stripped it down intending to go vintage with the Quinn, but it's been untouched on a hook for awhile. Need to move it up the queue. Tire clearance is surprisingly generous, can get 40mm actual in there without getting too snug.
There's a kind of matching black track Harry Quinn listed on UK ebay for a few months now. I've resisted so far. Fork is drilled for a brake, but tire clearance looks mega-tight. It's a track frame, not a path racer. Would probably need to 650b to ride it in the streets.




There's a kind of matching black track Harry Quinn listed on UK ebay for a few months now. I've resisted so far. Fork is drilled for a brake, but tire clearance looks mega-tight. It's a track frame, not a path racer. Would probably need to 650b to ride it in the streets.




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#40
Senior Member
....and speaking of tight track frames that are a little comfier with 650b, this '71 Carlton/Raleigh Pro Track. 700c clearance wasn't terrible, 25mm actual was doable, but it's not a forgiving frame, and the bb is track-high, so the 34mm-ish 650b Grand Bois Cypres Extra Leger tires smooth things out nicely.
650b:




700c:
650b:




700c:

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#41
Senior Member
Here's my 1971 Mercian, which the previous owner found in a dumpster with a rattle-can paint job, dented frame and a cracked BB that had been rethreaded Italian. He did his research and discovered that the S/N was consistent with that of a vintage Mercian. After some back and forth with Mercian they confirmed its origin. He shipped it back to the Mercian shop for a full shop resto-- new BB shell, filled some dents, and a full respray. They blessed the new BB shell with the same S/N, so the provenance is maintained. I have all the papers from that resto work as well as the BB shell that they replaced. It's now a pencil holder on my workbench.

And my 1982 Jack Taylor Tour of Britain. The previous owner bought the NOS frameset from the Taylor shop around when they closed up shop around 2000 and held onto it for 12 years after it had spent 18 years in the Taylors' attic. I built it up with mostly French parts.

And my 1982 Jack Taylor Tour of Britain. The previous owner bought the NOS frameset from the Taylor shop around when they closed up shop around 2000 and held onto it for 12 years after it had spent 18 years in the Taylors' attic. I built it up with mostly French parts.

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#42
feros ferio
Join Date: Jul 2000
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Bikes: 1959 Capo Modell Campagnolo; 1960 Capo Sieger (2); 1962 Carlton Franco Suisse; 1970 Peugeot UO-8; 1982 Bianchi Campione d'Italia; 1988 Schwinn Project KOM-10;
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-- Charlie Harding of C. Harding's For Bikes, Westwood Bl., Los Angeles, 1970s
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"Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing." --Theodore Roosevelt
Capo: 1959 Modell Campagnolo, S/N 40324; 1960 Sieger (2), S/N 42624, 42597
Carlton: 1962 Franco Suisse, S/N K7911
Peugeot: 1970 UO-8, S/N 0010468
Bianchi: 1982 Campione d'Italia, S/N 1.M9914
Schwinn: 1988 Project KOM-10, S/N F804069
"Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing." --Theodore Roosevelt
Capo: 1959 Modell Campagnolo, S/N 40324; 1960 Sieger (2), S/N 42624, 42597
Carlton: 1962 Franco Suisse, S/N K7911
Peugeot: 1970 UO-8, S/N 0010468
Bianchi: 1982 Campione d'Italia, S/N 1.M9914
Schwinn: 1988 Project KOM-10, S/N F804069
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#43
Senior Member
'72 Hetchins Italia, with just a little bit o' "drool" at the fork crown. I had an even plainer Italia some years back, so this is a bonus, but I wouldn't mind just a bit more. Outside surface of the seat stay at the stay tops and rear brake bridge would do nicely. I've posted this here before, most recent work in 2020 was salvaging the Campy high-flange hubs from the FedEx-trashed wheels and having them rebuilt with Pacenti Brevet rims.
That's it for Brit bikes for me, which is kinda sad because I have a soft spot for them. Wouldn't mind a Mercian, and over the past 20yrs I somehow have let 7 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro frames pass through my hands without keeping a single one, which I now regret. But I can't keep 'em all and stay married, so whaddya gonna do? Fuggeddaboutit.





That's it for Brit bikes for me, which is kinda sad because I have a soft spot for them. Wouldn't mind a Mercian, and over the past 20yrs I somehow have let 7 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro frames pass through my hands without keeping a single one, which I now regret. But I can't keep 'em all and stay married, so whaddya gonna do? Fuggeddaboutit.






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#45
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Location: Netherlands, near the sea
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Bikes: '73 Rudge-Whitworth, '83 Viner Special Professional, '90 Falcon 'Team Banana', '91 Pinarello Asolo 'spumoni', '94 Giant Cadex CFR3 Campa, '97 Giant Atlanta MTB, '08 Merida Speeder T1, '16 Cube Peloton Race.
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#46
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Bikes: '73 Rudge-Whitworth, '83 Viner Special Professional, '90 Falcon 'Team Banana', '91 Pinarello Asolo 'spumoni', '94 Giant Cadex CFR3 Campa, '97 Giant Atlanta MTB, '08 Merida Speeder T1, '16 Cube Peloton Race.
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This, by the way, is my Pashley workbike. It stood outside a cafe, but the friendly owner stopped and I could buy it. Here I was fixing some minor details, couple of months back. It's not easy to ride, rather wobbly when going over bumps in the road, but I really do like it.

#47
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dang, we need a button labeled "Like all of the posts". It would save a lot of time in this thread!
Well, I was seduced by the Raleigh catalogs of the mid 70's, and my first good bike was a Raleigh Gran Sport. After 14 years, it was replaced by a frame from a semi-local custom builder, but I didn't lose my attachment to the Raleighs.
Somewhere along the way, I also got interested in other British bikes such as Mercians or Hetchins. Somehow I missed getting interested in the sexy Italian and French bikes, which is hard to explain.
My first Brit bike that I picked up after they were popular was a '74 Raleigh International that was effectively still in the box. I've kept it as stock as possible, down to the original bar tape and other odds and ends. The grease is fresh, though.


The second vintage Raleigh is even sexier than the International, although in a different way. The Raleigh 753 Team bike was the high tech bike of its era, using heat treated tubing and built by a small specialty shop with Raleigh. The quality is (probably) higher than any conventional production bike. The Reynolds 753 tubing was very lightweight for the time, and I think Raleigh drilled the dropout faces just to emphasize that point.



The last of my British bikes came up for sale on the Classic Rendezvous site. It was my size and the price was fair, so I couldn't say no. Crazy lugs, lots of contrasting panels on the seat tube, and the lovely curly stays, so it's just a very fun bike. Plus, the 531C tubing seems to be flexy enough to make the bike fun to ride, so I've been very happy with it.



Steve in Peoria
Well, I was seduced by the Raleigh catalogs of the mid 70's, and my first good bike was a Raleigh Gran Sport. After 14 years, it was replaced by a frame from a semi-local custom builder, but I didn't lose my attachment to the Raleighs.
Somewhere along the way, I also got interested in other British bikes such as Mercians or Hetchins. Somehow I missed getting interested in the sexy Italian and French bikes, which is hard to explain.
My first Brit bike that I picked up after they were popular was a '74 Raleigh International that was effectively still in the box. I've kept it as stock as possible, down to the original bar tape and other odds and ends. The grease is fresh, though.



The second vintage Raleigh is even sexier than the International, although in a different way. The Raleigh 753 Team bike was the high tech bike of its era, using heat treated tubing and built by a small specialty shop with Raleigh. The quality is (probably) higher than any conventional production bike. The Reynolds 753 tubing was very lightweight for the time, and I think Raleigh drilled the dropout faces just to emphasize that point.



The last of my British bikes came up for sale on the Classic Rendezvous site. It was my size and the price was fair, so I couldn't say no. Crazy lugs, lots of contrasting panels on the seat tube, and the lovely curly stays, so it's just a very fun bike. Plus, the 531C tubing seems to be flexy enough to make the bike fun to ride, so I've been very happy with it.



Steve in Peoria
#48
Senior Member
EA Boult was transitioning into Witcomb Cycles when this frame was built.
I hope you enjoy reading the back story.
Philip
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#49
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Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Netherlands, near the sea
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Bikes: '73 Rudge-Whitworth, '83 Viner Special Professional, '90 Falcon 'Team Banana', '91 Pinarello Asolo 'spumoni', '94 Giant Cadex CFR3 Campa, '97 Giant Atlanta MTB, '08 Merida Speeder T1, '16 Cube Peloton Race.
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I have updated my post with the link to the build thread The thread for the EA Boult is here. It is a long thread as it contains the original owner's wonderful recollections. The paint replicated the original colours and design. Whilst most were trying to accentuate the lugwork, this was a radical departure, and from my research was confined to a few builders. The accent colour, pure magenta, is also at odds with the traditional large output bike manufacturers.
EA Boult was transitioning into Witcomb Cycles when this frame was built.
I hope you enjoy reading the back story.
Philip
EA Boult was transitioning into Witcomb Cycles when this frame was built.
I hope you enjoy reading the back story.
Philip
#50
Senior Member
Great thread and it seems that I cannot get enough of fine old British steel. I'll admit that I especially like the classic machines with computers and bottle cages. I know, not period correct but, to me, a clear indication that those bikes, like mine, are in steady rotation. On the road, in the wild, in harms way every week.
"Ships are safe in port but that's not what ships are made for."
"Ships are safe in port but that's not what ships are made for."
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