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.

Trek 620

Old 07-21-23 | 02:34 PM
  #1  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 8,888
Likes: 2,967
From: Elwood Indiana

Bikes: they change so much I'm tired of updating this

Trek 620

Just finished this earlier today, started out completely original. Added some Cinelli bars and stem, Panaracer Paselas,Brooks B-17, Tektro levers and Suntour Barcons. Pretty happy with it except for the half step rings. I need to find a smaller middle ring.
__________________
Semper fi
Old 07-21-23 | 03:48 PM
  #2  
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Sep 2014
Posts: 1,363
Likes: 456
From: Baton Rouge La
Wow. Looks great. Looks like it still has the original helicomatics?
Hobbiano is offline  
Reply
Old 07-21-23 | 03:52 PM
  #3  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 8,888
Likes: 2,967
From: Elwood Indiana

Bikes: they change so much I'm tired of updating this

Originally Posted by Hobbiano
Wow. Looks great. Looks like it still has the original helicomatics?
Yep, original wheels. This is a very low mileage bike.
__________________
Semper fi
sloar is offline  
Reply
Old 07-21-23 | 04:32 PM
  #4  
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 2,031
Likes: 1,067
From: Toledo Ohio

Bikes: 1964 Huffy Sportsman, 1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport (3), 1982 Trek 412, 1983 Trek 700, 1989 Miyata 1000LT, 1991 Bianchi Boardwalk, plus others

What size are your tires? Nice bike.
sd5782 is offline  
Reply
Old 07-21-23 | 04:39 PM
  #5  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 8,888
Likes: 2,967
From: Elwood Indiana

Bikes: they change so much I'm tired of updating this

Originally Posted by sd5782
What size are your tires? Nice bike.
27” x 1 1/4”
__________________
Semper fi
sloar is offline  
Reply
Old 07-21-23 | 04:48 PM
  #6  
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 2,031
Likes: 1,067
From: Toledo Ohio

Bikes: 1964 Huffy Sportsman, 1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport (3), 1982 Trek 412, 1983 Trek 700, 1989 Miyata 1000LT, 1991 Bianchi Boardwalk, plus others

Oh, okay. I was thinking 700c and they were looking a bit wider. I know better that the Treks were mostly 27s. I do see that you have the standard red label variety. I think they ride better than the blue label pro tite version.
sd5782 is offline  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 11:58 AM
  #7  
jonwvara's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 4,058
Likes: 943
From: Washington County, Vermont, USA

Bikes: 1973-4 Gitane Tour de France, early 1970's Lejeune, 1970 Italvega Super Speciale, 2010 Surly Long Haul Trucker 26

Maybe you can learn to like half-step gearing--a lot of people around here do, including me. Not sure what the tooth counts on on the Helicomatic freewheel, but maybe they don't give well-spaced ratios with the existing chainrings. Given the difficulty of trying to customize the Helicomatic freewheel, it might be necessary to find a different rear wheel, or relace it to a new hub. Nice bike, though!
__________________
www.redclovercomponents.com

"Progress might have been all right once, but it has gone on too long."
--Ogden Nash
jonwvara is offline  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 12:49 PM
  #8  
Classtime's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 5,836
Likes: 3,421
From: Los Angeles

Bikes: 82 Medici, 85 Ironman, 2011 Richard Sachs

On my 620 with the 1/2 Step + granny, I could use both middle and large ring with any cog. If middle ring and big cog was too high a gear then it was time for the granny and the middle cog.
__________________
I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs. But I do hate all e-bikes.
Classtime is online now  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 01:14 PM
  #9  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2008
Posts: 8,888
Likes: 2,967
From: Elwood Indiana

Bikes: they change so much I'm tired of updating this

I’m slowly recovering from a torn meniscus, I’m slowly getting stronger but still want to even out my gearing. It’s not a huge deal changing out a $20 chainring. I can always swap it back later.
__________________
Semper fi
sloar is offline  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 03:07 PM
  #10  
jonwvara's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 4,058
Likes: 943
From: Washington County, Vermont, USA

Bikes: 1973-4 Gitane Tour de France, early 1970's Lejeune, 1970 Italvega Super Speciale, 2010 Surly Long Haul Trucker 26

Ignore my dumb suggestion about learning to like half-step. You've been messing with old bikes for long enough to know what you like.

I am working hard at not acquiring any new bikes, but if I found a 620 in my size, I doubt that I'd be able to resist it.
__________________
www.redclovercomponents.com

"Progress might have been all right once, but it has gone on too long."
--Ogden Nash
jonwvara is offline  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 03:11 PM
  #11  
bikemig's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
Community Builder
Community Influencer
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 21,823
Likes: 5,781
From: Middle Earth (aka IA)

Bikes: A bunch of old bikes and a few new ones

Originally Posted by jonwvara
Ignore my dumb suggestion about learning to like half-step. You've been messing with old bikes for long enough to know what you like.

I am working hard at not acquiring any new bikes, but if I found a 620 in my size, I doubt that I'd be able to resist it.
You and me both,
bikemig is offline  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 03:34 PM
  #12  
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 2,031
Likes: 1,067
From: Toledo Ohio

Bikes: 1964 Huffy Sportsman, 1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport (3), 1982 Trek 412, 1983 Trek 700, 1989 Miyata 1000LT, 1991 Bianchi Boardwalk, plus others

And especially if it was the long wheelbase version.
sd5782 is offline  
Reply
Old 07-22-23 | 05:49 PM
  #13  
Classtime's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 5,836
Likes: 3,421
From: Los Angeles

Bikes: 82 Medici, 85 Ironman, 2011 Richard Sachs

Originally Posted by sd5782
And especially if it was the long wheelbase version.
hmmmm
This 620 looks a little short. Could be why the 1/2 step is unsatisfying?
__________________
I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs. But I do hate all e-bikes.
Classtime is online now  
Reply
Old 07-23-23 | 12:22 AM
  #14  
Road Fan's Avatar
Senior Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 17,196
Likes: 761
From: Ann Arbor, MI

Bikes: 1980 Masi, 1984 Mondonico, 1984 Trek 610, 1980 Woodrup Giro, 2005 Mondonico Futura Leggera ELOS, 1967 PX10E, 1971 Peugeot UO-8

Originally Posted by jonwvara
Maybe you can learn to like half-step gearing--a lot of people around here do, including me. Not sure what the tooth counts on on the Helicomatic freewheel, but maybe they don't give well-spaced ratios with the existing chainrings. Given the difficulty of trying to customize the Helicomatic freewheel, it might be necessary to find a different rear wheel, or relace it to a new hub. Nice bike, though!
Yes, my Helico which came on my 1984 610 was an oddball mix of gears, never suited to a half-step. I looked for ½ doubles but they never worked well. Unfortunately, the original 52/40, which could have worked well as an Alpine or crossover, still didn't work well, again due to the odd Trek interpretation of a Helicomatic.

I finally got a used set of Campy hub wheels, and started serious gear phreaking! Better, but the bike still had serious climbing problems - not least the wimpy legs of the owner, faced with big Denver rollers and the foothills of the Rockies! But I did put together a decent road half-step, just not a wide-range 2 x 6! For the day, I needed a TA crank and a 48/28 or so, to work with a 13/28 of 13/32!

Last edited by Road Fan; 07-23-23 at 12:25 AM.
Road Fan is offline  
Reply

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

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.