Parts Availability
#2
Tinker-er



Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 1,609
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From: Mid-Atlantic
Bikes: 1956 Rudge; 1981 Miyata; 1994 Breezer; 1987 Raleigh Mtn Trials; 1952 R.O. Harrison; 1994 Concorde; 1949 Rotrax; 1964 A.S. Gillott; Early 60s Frejus; ~1979 RRB track; Unknown Interwar track
Yes. The most difficult thing to find for a bicycle like that are hoods for the brake levers, but they are still around so you should be good to go.
#3
Senior Member

Joined: Oct 2005
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From: Upper Left, USA
#5
Extraordinary Magnitude


Joined: Aug 2009
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From: Waukesha WI
Bikes: 1978 Trek TX700; 1978/79 Trek 736; 1984 Specialized Stumpjumper Sport; 1984 Schwinn Voyageur SP; 1985 Trek 620; 1985 Trek 720; 1986 Trek 400 Elance; 1987 Schwinn High Sierra; 1990 Miyata 1000LT
There's myriads of options for standard maintenance/repair, rebuilding, upgrading, retromodding...
Probably the hardest thing is finding tires- but, thankfully, there's been a thread for that!
The ultimate 27" tire reference thread!
Probably the hardest thing is finding tires- but, thankfully, there's been a thread for that!
The ultimate 27" tire reference thread!
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Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
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Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
#6
It's a bit ironic that things we did not value too much back in the days like brake lever hoods are turning out to be the hardest things to find when restoring a C&V bike.It's just their very perishable nature and the fact that many brakeset makers from back then are long gone, means we eventually hit dead ends in our search for these parts......
Heck, even brake hoods made by the biggest companies that are still around are becoming unobtanium, like Shimano's 7400 series brake lever hoods. Shimano made lots and lots of those brakesets and you can find them easy enough......but it would be a different story for the lever hoods.
Heck, even brake hoods made by the biggest companies that are still around are becoming unobtanium, like Shimano's 7400 series brake lever hoods. Shimano made lots and lots of those brakesets and you can find them easy enough......but it would be a different story for the lever hoods.
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72 Line Seeker
83 Davidson Signature
84 Peugeot PSV
84 Peugeot PY10FC
84 Gitane Tour de France.
85 Vitus Plus Carbone 7
86 ALAN Record Carbonio
86 Medici Aerodynamic (Project)
88 Pinarello Montello
89 Bottecchia Professional Chorus SL
95 Trek 5500 OCLV (Project)
#7
Patina Avoider


Joined: Apr 2011
Posts: 3,279
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From: Maryland, USA
Bikes: Drysdale/Gitane/Zeus/Masi/Falcon/Palo Alto/Vitus
It's a bit ironic that things we did not value too much back in the days like brake lever hoods are turning out to be the hardest things to find when restoring a C&V bike.It's just their very perishable nature and the fact that many brakeset makers from back then are long gone, means we eventually hit dead ends in our search for these parts...... Heck, even brake hoods made by the biggest companies that are still around are becoming unobtanium, like Shimano's 7400 series brake lever hoods. Shimano made lots and lots of those brakesets and you can find them easy enough......but it would be a different story for the lever hoods.
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Larry:1958 Drysdale, 1961 Gitane Gran Sport, 1974 Zeus track, 1988 Masi Gran Corsa, 1974 Falcon, 1980 Palo Alto, 198? Vitus 979. Susan: 1976 Windsor Profesional.
Larry:1958 Drysdale, 1961 Gitane Gran Sport, 1974 Zeus track, 1988 Masi Gran Corsa, 1974 Falcon, 1980 Palo Alto, 198? Vitus 979. Susan: 1976 Windsor Profesional.
#8
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2020
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From: Wake Forest, NC
Bikes: 1989 Cinelli Supercorsa
Within the last year, I got a set of 7402 hoods, NOS, in white, no less. I've also seen a set come up in black. They are available, but you better be prepared to drop a C note for a set.
#9
Senior Member

Joined: Apr 2009
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You also asked about bearings. Your hubs are ball-bearing hubs, and those sizes have not changed. They are readily available. It is not even hard to repack the hubs with new balls and adjust the hub. Do you know anything about the history of the bike and how much it was ridden? From the single photo, it looks in good shape. If you wanted to replace or up-grade anything on this bike, it should not be hard-at-all, to do. What is the condition of the tires?
#10
Patina Avoider


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From: Maryland, USA
Bikes: Drysdale/Gitane/Zeus/Masi/Falcon/Palo Alto/Vitus
In my experience, most of the time spent is crawling around on the shop floor looking for the one bearing that rolled away. Thus: MAGNETIC
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Larry:1958 Drysdale, 1961 Gitane Gran Sport, 1974 Zeus track, 1988 Masi Gran Corsa, 1974 Falcon, 1980 Palo Alto, 198? Vitus 979. Susan: 1976 Windsor Profesional.
Larry:1958 Drysdale, 1961 Gitane Gran Sport, 1974 Zeus track, 1988 Masi Gran Corsa, 1974 Falcon, 1980 Palo Alto, 198? Vitus 979. Susan: 1976 Windsor Profesional.
#11
Thrifty Bill

Joined: Jan 2008
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From: Mans of NC & SW UT Desert
Bikes: 86 Katakura Silk, 87 Prologue X2, 88 Cimarron LE, 1975 Sekai 4000 Professional, 73 Paramount, plus more
The only thing Miyata made on your bike was the frame and fork. Everything else came from the same suppliers that sold to all the other brands in the world. Lever hoods are the only part that is hard to find. But you can always buy brand new brake levers with hoods, just not the exact model.
Example, 1/4" bearing balls (in your BB and rear wheel hubs) are still made of course, and can be bought on Amazon or your choice of shopping places. Other sized bearings are still available too. Cables, tires, tubes, rim strips, freewheels, and more are still available new.
Example, 1/4" bearing balls (in your BB and rear wheel hubs) are still made of course, and can be bought on Amazon or your choice of shopping places. Other sized bearings are still available too. Cables, tires, tubes, rim strips, freewheels, and more are still available new.
Last edited by wrk101; 02-25-23 at 09:47 AM.
#12
Senior Member


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From: Bastrop Texas
Bikes: Univega, Peu P6, Peu PR-10, Ted Williams, Peu UO-8, Peu UO-18 Mixte, Peu Dolomites
Bike looks complete as is?
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#13
Thread Starter
Full Member

Joined: May 2020
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I haven't looked at it yet, seller says it's "hardly used". As far as the brake hoods, could these be replaced with modern levers? I'm sure it will need tires, this seems the norm for used bikes I look at, usually they have been sitting and deteriorating for years. Thanks for the info.
#14
Senior Member


Joined: Sep 2014
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From: Baton Rouge La
Velo Orange and Soma Fab Shop have brake hoods for non aero levers, and I'm sure lots of other places do too, but probably not your local bike shop.
Same thing with 27" tires. Widely available - but maybe not so much at your local bike shop.
Same thing with 27" tires. Widely available - but maybe not so much at your local bike shop.
Last edited by Hobbiano; 02-24-23 at 07:06 PM.
#15
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#16
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2021
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From: SW Florida, USA
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Also FWIW: in the photo, the brake hoods on the bike look to be in quite good shape (like the rest of the bike). If they are - and you end up getting it - maybe get a spare set of hoods for future use and use those on the bike now until they need replacement. Cane Creek non-areo hoods aren't terribly costly; neither are Dia Compe hoods. Some other "knock offs" are even cheaper. And having a spare set should set you up for the foreseeable future in case they go out of production.
Regarding replacing the existing brake levers with aero levers: aero levers (and aero cable routing) has advantages, but also complicates matters and isn't without disadvantages. My take in this case would be: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
Last edited by Hondo6; 02-25-23 at 03:50 PM. Reason: Add info; correct grammar error.
#17
Thrifty Bill

Joined: Jan 2008
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From: Mans of NC & SW UT Desert
Bikes: 86 Katakura Silk, 87 Prologue X2, 88 Cimarron LE, 1975 Sekai 4000 Professional, 73 Paramount, plus more
Personally, I'm a fan of the Tektro aero levers. I wouldn't use them on my 1974 Paramount. But I have used them on other vintage bikes. Picture from an ebay listing. These come in black or gum. Functionally, I prefer aero levers. But on a top of the line, vintage bike rebuild, not so much. By the late 1980s, many bikes came with aero levers.
I have them on my 1988 Cimarron drop bar bike. Which of course, was a flat bar bike originally.
I have them on my 1988 Cimarron drop bar bike. Which of course, was a flat bar bike originally.
#18
Senior Member




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From: Middle Earth (aka IA)
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That bike is very clean and as others have pointed out, parts are readily available. If the bike fits you and the price is right, Miyata made a quality bike. This would have been at the lower end of their line up but still a solid bike. Those look to be good quality suntour derailleurs for example (though hard to tell since the pic is not from the drive side).
#19
Senior Member
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From: SW Florida, USA
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Personally, I'm a fan of the Tektro aero levers. I wouldn't use them on my 1974 Paramount. But I have used them on other vintage bikes. Picture from an ebay listing. These come in black or gum. Functionally, I prefer aero levers. But on a top of the line, vintage bike rebuild, not so much. By the late 1980s, many bikes came with aero levers.
I have them on my 1988 Cimarron drop bar bike. Which of course, was a flat bar bike originally.

I have them on my 1988 Cimarron drop bar bike. Which of course, was a flat bar bike originally.

But between removing the other levers, unwrapping the bars, likely replacing the cables and housing, buying and installing the new levers, re-wrapping the bars, and readjusting everything . . . well, to me it just seems that's more work than the modest aero advantage is worth if the existing brakes are in good shape and work well enough. In that case, I'd just put a new set of good shoes on the existing brakes and lube the cables. YMMV.
Last edited by Hondo6; 02-25-23 at 03:53 PM.







