Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Classic & Vintage
Reload this Page >

1972 Raleigh Professional track bike

Search
Notices
Classic & Vintage This forum is to discuss the many aspects of classic and vintage bicycles, including musclebikes, lightweights, middleweights, hi-wheelers, bone-shakers, safety bikes and much more.

1972 Raleigh Professional track bike

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 03-09-21 | 01:14 PM
  #1  
Dylansbob's Avatar
Thread Starter
2k miles from the midwest
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,963
Likes: 944
From: Washington

Bikes: ~'75 Colin Laing, '80s Schwinn SuperSport 650b, ex-Backroads ti project...

1972 Raleigh Professional track bike

A part of the bike estate that scozim didn't photo was this Raleigh. Serial number begins with "G", dating it to 1972. The original owner had obviously used it for road riding with the front brake and more recent clincher rear wheel. I negotiated for the original undrilled fork and Record/AVA wheelset to match. Please forgive the running gear. In my excitement to test ride, I just pulled the first road wheel with a 23 tire to test.

Future plans are full teardown cleaning and to lace a basic silver clincher wheelset for the ocassional road ride, as well as some proper cotton bartape. The PO appears to have been a nearly identical size as me, the fit was nearly spot on after raising the saddle ~2mm.





Old 03-09-21 | 01:22 PM
  #2  
jeirvine's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 3,372
Likes: 598
From: Baltimore MD

Bikes: '72 Motobecane Grand Record, '72 Gitane tandem, '72 Raleigh Super Course, '73 Raleigh Gran Sport, '73 Colnago Super, '76 Fiorelli Coppi, '78 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro, '78 Trek 930, '81 Holdsworth Special 650B, '86 Masi GC, ’94 Bridgestone RB-T

Heck of a find. Glad you were able to grab it. I assume that's the replacement fork on there? Cool bottle cage too - never seen one like that.
-J
__________________
The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
jeirvine is offline  
Reply
Old 03-09-21 | 01:30 PM
  #3  
Dylansbob's Avatar
Thread Starter
2k miles from the midwest
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,963
Likes: 944
From: Washington

Bikes: ~'75 Colin Laing, '80s Schwinn SuperSport 650b, ex-Backroads ti project...

Originally Posted by jeirvine
... I assume that's the replacement fork on there? Cool bottle cage too - never seen one like that.
-J

I have a second fork that closer matches the paint, with tall chrome socks and an undrilled crown. This one on it appears to be a slightly different shade of red.
Dylansbob is offline  
Reply
Old 03-09-21 | 02:04 PM
  #4  
steelbikeguy's Avatar
Senior Member
15 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2008
Posts: 5,318
Likes: 4,827
From: Peoria, IL
pretty cool!
it definitely needs some proper high-flange track hubs, though.

For anyone unfamiliar with the original glory (and sex appeal) of this model, here's the catalog page...



Steve in Peoria
(maybe replace that bar grip with some white cloth tape too)
steelbikeguy is offline  
Reply
Old 03-09-21 | 04:51 PM
  #5  
ascherer's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 3,773
Likes: 6,142
From: Manhattan & Woodstock NY

Bikes: 2024 A Homer Hilsen, 1992 Paramount PDG Series, 1991 Mercian King of Mercia, 1987 Mercian Pro, 1985 Shogun 500, 1969? Falcon San Remo, 1972 Peugeot PX-10, 1972 Schwinn Paramount P13-9, 1971 Peugeot PX-10, 1970 Raleigh Pro Mk I

Sweeeeeet
__________________
2024 A Homer Hilsen, 1992 Paramount PDG Series, 1991 Mercian King of Mercia, 1987 Mercian Pro, 1985 Shogun 500, 1972 Peugeot PX-10, 1972 Schwinn Paramount P13-9, 1971 Peugeot PX-10, 1970 Raleigh Pro Mk I, 1969? Falcon San Remo
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
ascherer is offline  
Reply
Old 03-09-21 | 05:06 PM
  #6  
3speedslow's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 9,479
Likes: 1,303
From: Jacksonville, NC

Bikes: A few

Sweet Mother of Bicycle Awe-Some-Ness!
3speedslow is offline  
Reply
Old 03-09-21 | 08:18 PM
  #7  
bwilli88's Avatar
Not lost wanderer.
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 3,686
Likes: 1,425
From: Lancaster, Pa

Bikes: Cambodia bike,2012 Fuji Stratos...

Probably my Grail bike right there. Nice.
bwilli88 is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 08:34 AM
  #8  
cudak888's Avatar
www.theheadbadge.com
Titanium Club Membership
20 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 29,025
Likes: 5,537
From: Southern Florida

Bikes: https://www.theheadbadge.com

Gorgeous. Glad to see that Raleigh obviously put their all into the lugwork on these as opposed to the usual production bikes.

Is that the former owner's name on the stem? Evian?

-Kurt
__________________












cudak888 is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 09:45 AM
  #9  
noglider's Avatar
aka Tom Reingold
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
Community Influencer
 
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 44,299
Likes: 6,552
From: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA

Bikes: 1962 Rudge Sports, 1971 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Raleigh Pro Track, 1974 Raleigh International, 1975 Viscount Fixie, 1982 McLean, 1996 Lemond (Ti), 2002 Burley Zydeco tandem

I have one that I believe is a 1971. I raced it a bit in the summer of 2014. I hardly ever ride it, but I still love it.
__________________
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.
noglider is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 10:35 AM
  #10  
jeirvine's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 3,372
Likes: 598
From: Baltimore MD

Bikes: '72 Motobecane Grand Record, '72 Gitane tandem, '72 Raleigh Super Course, '73 Raleigh Gran Sport, '73 Colnago Super, '76 Fiorelli Coppi, '78 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro, '78 Trek 930, '81 Holdsworth Special 650B, '86 Masi GC, ’94 Bridgestone RB-T

Originally Posted by cudak888
Is that the former owner's name on the stem? Evian?
-Kurt
The 3ttt Record stems that were sized for 25.4 bars that came on early 70's higher-end Raleighs had that EVIAN stamping. Evian was the UK importer for 3TTT products back in the 70's.
__________________
The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
jeirvine is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 11:05 AM
  #11  
cudak888's Avatar
www.theheadbadge.com
Titanium Club Membership
20 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 29,025
Likes: 5,537
From: Southern Florida

Bikes: https://www.theheadbadge.com

Originally Posted by jeirvine
The 3ttt Record stems that were sized for 25.4 bars that came on early 70's higher-end Raleighs had that EVIAN stamping. Evian was the UK importer for 3TTT products back in the 70's.
Gotcha. I've had precious little opportunity to see that many 3TTT Records, and the only one I do have didn't have its origins through a Raleigh. Good to know.

-Kurt
__________________












cudak888 is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 01:44 PM
  #12  
Dylansbob's Avatar
Thread Starter
2k miles from the midwest
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,963
Likes: 944
From: Washington

Bikes: ~'75 Colin Laing, '80s Schwinn SuperSport 650b, ex-Backroads ti project...

Thought people might like to see the original fork. Took some pics this morning.



Old 03-10-21 | 06:21 PM
  #13  
jeirvine's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 3,372
Likes: 598
From: Baltimore MD

Bikes: '72 Motobecane Grand Record, '72 Gitane tandem, '72 Raleigh Super Course, '73 Raleigh Gran Sport, '73 Colnago Super, '76 Fiorelli Coppi, '78 Raleigh SBDU Team Pro, '78 Trek 930, '81 Holdsworth Special 650B, '86 Masi GC, ’94 Bridgestone RB-T

Oh my, yes. That's the ticket.
__________________
The man who dies with the most toys…is dead. - Rootboy
jeirvine is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 06:30 PM
  #14  
Fahrenheit531's Avatar
I AM AI
 
Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 4,288
Likes: 1,170
From: Tucson, AZ

Bikes: 2008 S-Works Roubaix SL, 1979 Raleigh Comp GS, 1978 Schwinn Volare

Oh man.
Enjoy!
__________________
A race bike in any era is a highly personal choice that at its "best" balances the requirements of fit, weight, handling, durability and cost tempered by the willingness to toss it and oneself down the pavement at considerable speed. ~Bandera
Fahrenheit531 is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 07:12 PM
  #15  
Senior Member
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 21,860
Likes: 3,748
Very nice, when these arrived at a shop they were fitted with Clement No.3 silk track tires.
They were very scarce. Not available when I needed a track bike.
I considered ordering a Paramount, but they were backordered over a Year!
repechage is offline  
Reply
Old 03-10-21 | 11:30 PM
  #16  
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 1,188
Likes: 725
Originally Posted by jeirvine
Heck of a find. Glad you were able to grab it. I assume that's the replacement fork on there? Cool bottle cage too - never seen one like that.
-J
It’s a Blackburn, sold in the 80s. Used the same hanger for an item called the rack stand, used to hold reading material while you were on the wind trainer. Dang, those things were loud!
Mr. Spadoni is offline  
Reply
Old 03-11-21 | 11:43 AM
  #17  
pcb's Avatar
pcb
Senior Member
 
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 1,475
Likes: 655
From: Joisey
Oooh, very cool! My '71 is a little more primitive. No bb shell cutout, no fork tangs, still has Carlton decals. Same lugset, but semi-wrap seatstays i/o this full-wrap. Raleigh upped their game a little bit as they rolled into '72.

Mine has a brake-drilled fork crown, so I can ride with a front brake without swapping forks. But having the undisturbed original fork and a close-match drilled one is nicer.

I managed to get 32-584/650b wheels/tires to fit, which makes for a slightly smoother ride for this old sack o' bones. BB height on mine is sky-high, 55mm bb drop, so lowering the height doesn't cause any corner-strike problems. The Grand Bois Cypres Extra Leger tires get close to 34mm wide on the Pacenti Brevet rims, which are 19mm/23mm int/ext width. No crimps in the chainstays, so the wheel has to be all the way back in the ends to get chainstay clearance.

That Blackburn bar-mount cage is pretty neat. I don't remember ever having one, but have distinct memories of tightening that setscrew. Probably on a customer's bike back in the day. The solution I often use these days is the good ol' Minoura MB-1, which is a total pain in the rear end to install, but once installed and set, pretty solid and stable.

Got the '71 as a frameset, and for the first time in a long time I did first build it up pretty close to vintage catalog spec. Found my tolerance level pretty low for all that on a fixed gear for road riding, compared to a vintage road-bike build. So there are now some significant/glaring changes from catalog spec, but it's a bit more fun to ride this way.

__________________
Fuggedaboutit!
pcb is offline  
Reply
Old 03-11-21 | 12:04 PM
  #18  
Dylansbob's Avatar
Thread Starter
2k miles from the midwest
 
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,963
Likes: 944
From: Washington

Bikes: ~'75 Colin Laing, '80s Schwinn SuperSport 650b, ex-Backroads ti project...

Originally Posted by pcb

...I managed to get 32-584/650b wheels/tires to fit, which makes for a slightly smoother ride for this old sack o' bones. BB height on mine is sky-high, 55mm bb drop, so lowering the height doesn't cause any corner-strike problems. The Grand Bois Cypres Extra Leger tires get close to 34mm wide on the Pacenti Brevet rims, which are 19mm/23mm int/ext width. No crimps in the chainstays, so the wheel has to be all the way back in the ends to get chainstay clearance....
Got the '71 as a frameset, and for the first time in a long time I did first build it up pretty close to vintage catalog spec. Found my tolerance level pretty low for all that on a fixed gear for road riding, compared to a vintage road-bike build. So there are now some significant/glaring changes from catalog spec, but it's a bit more fun to ride this way.

You and I have similar tastes. I've been wanting to do up a 650b fixed, even went so far as to build a brakeless wheelset.

Interestingly, this one has crimped stays and the BB drop is ~70mm. This past winter I had bought a dirt-cheap set of Maxxis 30mm tubulars that I can't decide whether to glue onto the original rims. I tried my tracklocross wheelset with 30mm clinchers and the fit is really good.

Now the decision is to run an incredibly garish set of yellow deepVs to be able to ride it or glue a set of ugly(giant yellow "Maxxis" written on the sidewall) wide tubulars onto the original wheels.
Dylansbob is offline  
Reply
Old 03-11-21 | 12:16 PM
  #19  
Junior Member
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Dec 2020
Posts: 150
Likes: 379
From: Estonia

Bikes: HVZ Meteor 1979, HVZ Champion 1962, HVZ SS Moskva80 1981, Dürkopp 1936

Its beautiful. Props to the original owner for not drilling the fork also, that would be a crime.
geeteeiii is offline  
Reply
Old 03-11-21 | 01:24 PM
  #20  
Senior Member
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 21,860
Likes: 3,748
I liked the color combo of turquoise and white very much.
repechage is offline  
Reply
Old 03-11-21 | 02:09 PM
  #21  
pcb's Avatar
pcb
Senior Member
 
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 1,475
Likes: 655
From: Joisey
Oh yeah, I didn't notice the stay crimps and less-horizontal chainstay angle before. Add that to the list of changes/updates/improvements from '71 to '72. Dang, how much easier my setup would've been if mine was a '72.

If mine fit 30-622s, given the high bb, I _might_ consider 38-584s. But I'd be well and happy riding it as-is with 30mm 700c tires. 26-622 up front was tight on mine.

I'm not necessarily qualified to advise on questions of taste. I'm libertarian when it comes to component choices, especially for riders. But, but, but....that is a very classy sled.

I'd definitely put whatever is on-hand and fits/works to get it ridden. Yellow, deep-v, almost anything goes. But t'were it mine, I'd want to hold out for some nicer tubs to glue on the original wheels. Veloflex is selling direct from Italy at seemingly attractive prices, folks have gotten quick delivery with no hassle. The Pro Tour maxes out at 28mm, but they'd be plush and pretty. I don't know what's up with Challenge width-wise, other brands, etc. FMB I'm guessing is real pricey?

Then again, I've got an aero brake lever, aero dummy lever, 'cross lever and a zip-tied Austin Powers on mine, none of which is kosher, era-appropriate or particularly classy.

Originally Posted by Dylansbob
You and I have similar tastes. I've been wanting to do up a 650b fixed, even went so far as to build a brakeless wheelset.

Interestingly, this one has crimped stays and the BB drop is ~70mm. This past winter I had bought a dirt-cheap set of Maxxis 30mm tubulars that I can't decide whether to glue onto the original rims. I tried my tracklocross wheelset with 30mm clinchers and the fit is really good.

Now the decision is to run an incredibly garish set of yellow deepVs to be able to ride it or glue a set of ugly(giant yellow "Maxxis" written on the sidewall) wide tubulars onto the original wheels.
__________________
Fuggedaboutit!
pcb is offline  
Reply
Old 05-05-21 | 10:02 AM
  #22  
Junior Member
 
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 16
Likes: 1
Originally Posted by Dylansbob
A part of the bike estate that scozim didn't photo was this Raleigh. Serial number begins with "G", dating it to 1972.
I have one, same frame sized, 26 yrs in my service, most years as my primary 'road' bike. I have fotos but havent met a 10post rule
[
You are only allowed to post URLs to other sites and photos after you have made 10 posts or more].on BikeForums and am blocked from uploading.
Have original[26yrs+] cranks, BB, seat-post, saddle, bars, and wheels, etc. Still ride the wheels, but most other components subbed out for better fit & road suitable # A8822
p1gnone is offline  
Reply
Old 05-05-21 | 10:04 AM
  #23  
Junior Member
 
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 16
Likes: 1
Always 700c tubulars
p1gnone is offline  
Reply
Old 05-05-21 | 10:05 AM
  #24  
Junior Member
 
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 16
Likes: 1
Front end has adapter post, Ti toiray chinese ahead stem
p1gnone is offline  
Reply
Old 05-05-21 | 10:06 AM
  #25  
Junior Member
 
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 16
Likes: 1
46cc bars, wanted wide but this was experimental.
p1gnone is offline  
Reply


Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.