Sport tourers with cantilever brakes?
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Additionally, you weren’t limited to 27” wheels with cantilevers. Most cantilevers of that era (and even later) were slotted so that they could be converted to 700C. The brake pads only need to be moved 2mm (thickness of a nickel) to go from 630mm diameter of the 27” to the 622mm diameter of a 700C.
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I am genuinely curious about this. Does the presence of cantilevers automatically disqualify a bike no matter the geometry? Or, is it that no one made a bike with cantilevers and qualifying geometry?
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Exactly, 622 to 630- and not a whole lot of brakes have that kind of adjustability.
FWIW- I had beginner's luck with Suntour XC Pro brakes and totally expected M900 XTR brakes to work... no go.
The kings of 27 to 700C conversions are the M732 XT brakes. I would assume the MT-62 would be the same- but you never really know.
FWIW- I had beginner's luck with Suntour XC Pro brakes and totally expected M900 XTR brakes to work... no go.
The kings of 27 to 700C conversions are the M732 XT brakes. I would assume the MT-62 would be the same- but you never really know.
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#30
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The 610 started off as a caliper/centerpull brake touring bike. I'll have to check the catalogs to see if the tubes and geometry changed much when it got cantilevers.
PS. Miyata was billing the 610 as a Touring AND Sport bike, whether with or without cantilivers.
PS. Miyata was billing the 610 as a Touring AND Sport bike, whether with or without cantilivers.
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Re. 27" to 700c wheel conversions
A side effect of switching wheel sizes on rim brake bikes is that the change in distance from the brake pivot to the pad/rim causes a change in leverage and therefore brake function. On caliper brakes (where pivot is between the rim and cable anchor), changing to smaller rims causes a decrease in braking force for a given force at the lever, while with cantilever brakes (any brakes where rim/pad are between the cable anchor and the pivot), changing to smaller rims causes an increase in brake force for a given lever force.
A side effect of switching wheel sizes on rim brake bikes is that the change in distance from the brake pivot to the pad/rim causes a change in leverage and therefore brake function. On caliper brakes (where pivot is between the rim and cable anchor), changing to smaller rims causes a decrease in braking force for a given force at the lever, while with cantilever brakes (any brakes where rim/pad are between the cable anchor and the pivot), changing to smaller rims causes an increase in brake force for a given lever force.
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You are right. I split the value in 2 and the split it again. That said, 4mm is a bit over 1/8” which isn’t much.
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Unfortunately, the brake pads on my bike are already at the bottom of the slots. Maybe a different brake would have more adjustment. When I bought the bike, it looked like it had led a rough life as a commuter and they used whatever parts they could find to keep it on the road. It had a 700c rear wheel and the cantilever brake had been swapped out for a Dia Compe centerpull. The front still had the original cantilever and a 27 inch wheel with a Campagnolo hub.
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That said, touring bikes were the first cyclocross bikes because the increased clearance with the cantis worked better in the mud.
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I've always seen cantis as a plus and can't understand people putting on caliper brakes with canti posts, or sawing off canti posts. Drew is a drew.
I've developed the thought that a sport tourer with light tubing, 43-ish chainstays, tire clearance for 38+ and cantis would be a dominant bike.
*by "light tubing" I mean 531/Ishiwata022/Columbus SP/Champion #3 neighborhood*
Sport tourers were "also ran" bikes, the "jack of all trades, master of none" and just "bikes." Because an "enthusiast" is going to want performance at some end of their investment- a racer is going to want a bike that has inherent traits of a racing bike- lightweight, nimble... while a tourer isn't so concerned about weight (to an extent) and prize stability over twitchy. An in-between bike is just "a bike" for a person who wants "a bike" and as such, it didn't get the nice tubing, it didn't get the fancy components... it just got **** done.
...
Old bikes are going to have that "product of their time" thing going on- tires were meant to be 28s but could take a 32- the 650B conversions are happy accidents, bikes that had a broad platform of usability either weighed more because they were meant to carry more, or they were more lower/mid level bikes, and cantis didn't go on regular road bikes. A couple of years ago I tried to get a Rivendell A. Homer Hilsen built for me with the old geometry and canti posts. That's pretty much exactly what I was looking for, but something you won't see on much of any vintage bikes.
I've developed the thought that a sport tourer with light tubing, 43-ish chainstays, tire clearance for 38+ and cantis would be a dominant bike.
*by "light tubing" I mean 531/Ishiwata022/Columbus SP/Champion #3 neighborhood*
Sport tourers were "also ran" bikes, the "jack of all trades, master of none" and just "bikes." Because an "enthusiast" is going to want performance at some end of their investment- a racer is going to want a bike that has inherent traits of a racing bike- lightweight, nimble... while a tourer isn't so concerned about weight (to an extent) and prize stability over twitchy. An in-between bike is just "a bike" for a person who wants "a bike" and as such, it didn't get the nice tubing, it didn't get the fancy components... it just got **** done.
...
Old bikes are going to have that "product of their time" thing going on- tires were meant to be 28s but could take a 32- the 650B conversions are happy accidents, bikes that had a broad platform of usability either weighed more because they were meant to carry more, or they were more lower/mid level bikes, and cantis didn't go on regular road bikes. A couple of years ago I tried to get a Rivendell A. Homer Hilsen built for me with the old geometry and canti posts. That's pretty much exactly what I was looking for, but something you won't see on much of any vintage bikes.
So: canti brakes, Mafacs, because they work, require little fussing and there are nowhere they are poor or dangerous. (And cheap.) 15 years later I upgraded to Shimano canit that came off a Miyata 610. Still there.
Brake posts are set to halfway between 27" and 700c because in 1978 who knew what the wheel standard was going to be or what I could get in, say, backwater Maine.
The frame? 531 (probably - Peter in those days charged extra for the sticker because he preferred the freedom to select the best tubing for that rider and application). Chainstays long enough for panniers. Horizontal dropouts so I could run fixed if I wanted. Front end modeled (but not exactly) off my Fuji Pro, a ride that fit like a dream and I loved. BB high enough to pedal a lot of corners (I was fresh off racing a very high BB crit bike.) Result? It's toured, climbed a lot of hills, a few 160 mile days, rain, very, very hard rain several times, seen snow and now has found its true place as an elegant fix gear. The long chainstays and highish BB - perfect! It does still sport LowRider mounts, derailleur hanger and BB cable guides so I get to change my mind. It does quite passably as a gravel bike with up to 38c tires.
And yes, the bike is a do-everything bike. I've since been buying and setting up bikes to do one thing well and the Mooney took a backseat for years. Then Cycle Oregon advertised their week ride to Crater Lake with gravel. Lots. And 1000' up and downs on that gravel. A great fix gear route but I gotta have big tires! Not happening on my avatar photo fix gear. But the Mooney can! Did it. And promptly fell in love with this classic English fix gear roadster of 1930s, 40s and 50s heritage. Still in love 5 years later; now back on sewups.
And the cantis? Well, on a fix gear I want slightly more gentle braking power because everything gets exciting at the absurd RPMs of very fast descents. I discovered 10 years ago that dual pivots de-powered with V-brake levers work really well. 5 years ago that they work just as well with those cantis. (Yes, on very long descents, my hands tire if I have to brake continuously. And my legs have been known to tire getting to the starting point of those descents! C'est la vie.) Those V-brake levers also come with huge, glorious hand holds! Perfect for uphill on those fix gears!
If I knew I could get a hold of the horizontally "winged" cantis like the old Mafacs or the early Shimano geometry copies, I'd spec my next bike with them in a flash. (I think Paul makes them too. If so, that's how I'd go now.)
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Sport tourers shared more DNA with racing bikes than touring bikes. To my mind, the only drop bar bikes with triples and cantilevers were touring bikes.
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I’ve never had a problem when I’ve upgraded brakes many times on a 1983 Miyata that began as a 27” and I converted to a 700C. Like 5 or 6 different brakes. Never had a problem being able to adjust the brakes to the right height. Even more modern cantilever brakes have a fair amount of adjustment.
#38
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The geometry on the Miyata 6xx series changed over time, earlier year it was distinct from the 1000 but towards the late 80s/early 90's the geometry was the same with different tubing (maybe?) and different components (definitely)
I rode a 82 1000 for a few years and it handled great unloaded/light load and pretty good fully loaded, albeit somewhat noodle-y. Twas a great bike.
The later trek 520 and maybe 620 might also be worth a look. Their chain stays were usually shorter than the 720.
Like the poster before me, I highly highly recommend the early Centurion Pro Tours with the bolt on centerpull brakes, feels fast yet smooth
I rode a 82 1000 for a few years and it handled great unloaded/light load and pretty good fully loaded, albeit somewhat noodle-y. Twas a great bike.
The later trek 520 and maybe 620 might also be worth a look. Their chain stays were usually shorter than the 720.
Like the poster before me, I highly highly recommend the early Centurion Pro Tours with the bolt on centerpull brakes, feels fast yet smooth
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This may have been discussed but would Randonneurers fit the Sport Tour criteria listed above?
We in the states do not have Randonneur or Brevet events, at least we don’t actually call them that we call the bikeathons or charity rides or Erotic events.
The ‘84 Randonneurer with a Mangalloy frame tips the scale around 25.5lbs
We in the states do not have Randonneur or Brevet events, at least we don’t actually call them that we call the bikeathons or charity rides or Erotic events.
The ‘84 Randonneurer with a Mangalloy frame tips the scale around 25.5lbs

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#40
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Sport Touring bikes to my mind are light tourers, analogous to a Randonneur bike, which were intended to be light, room for bigger tires, fenders and carry a light load. EBISU, per Hiroshi was to be a light, not a full loaded tourer. Mine pictured below from the first batch in 2000, in an earlier C&V build with Suntour/Sugino/Mafac/Nitto weighed under 23 pounds with fenders and a front rack.
Oh and would all the Rivendell variants, hunka sam ram frames be Sport Touring? Maybe not, they're heavy
Oh and would all the Rivendell variants, hunka sam ram frames be Sport Touring? Maybe not, they're heavy

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#42
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I can't say I have enough experience with the style to contribute much, but my '84 Gitane Grantour seems to sit kind of right in the middle of a lot of this. Made from Vitus 181 - which based on my research is in the 531 neighborhood, maybe a couple grams more? Originally shipped with Cantis set for 27"s and a Stronglight triple, the chainstays are coming in at 44. I've been commuting on it and it rides just beautifully unloaded. Haven't had a chance to weigh it in it's current form though.
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I don’t think https://rusa.org would agree.
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I have two Cannondale ST1000s, an 88 and a 90. Both came with Dia Compe NGC982 cantis, both easily converted from 27” to 700c. The spacing on the 90 is inline with modern canti spacing. I don’t remember measuring the spacing on the 88, but noticed there’s only one spring hole per post mount vs the 90’s three holes.
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So? I couldn’t give two craps what anybody rides. I don’t think of bikes with cantilevers and triples as “‘sport tourers,” at least under the classic, original definition.
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Another good resource is the 1988 Bicycling Buyer’s Guide. Not one of the 10 featured bikes defined as “Sport/Touring” bikes have cantilevers or triples.