![]() |
This '92 Bridgestone XO-3 was posted for free on a neighborhood thing, complete except the mangled front wheel with very low miles (original Ritchey tires!). Even though it's one of the less desirable, 700c tig welded XO's, it still has fairly unique geometry with a much shorter top tube than the competitors. I was originally just going to capitalize on the name and flip it but I've fallen in love. I'm gonna put some mustache bars on it and pretend it's one of the nicer ones;).
https://i.imgur.com/haGZhB1.jpg |
Originally Posted by hazetguy
(Post 20062568)
I picked up this Trek 660, listed on CL as a "training bike". Rescued it from a local resale shop.
As purchased, not cleaned at all. https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4691/...9e0d1f4d_b.jpg "My land sakes Jon!" ;) For a feller abiding in Carolina Del Norte you certainly seem to have a penchant for cycles hailing from California. This be one well trekked Trek. Birthed in Wiscoterra, thence to California and now to Asheville! Just imagine if she were fitted with a cyclometer what a tale to tell!. The business card affixed to the right seat stay comes from a shoppe in Fairfax, California which is the lbs for member [MENTION=306057]obrentharris[/MENTION]. https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4727/...00e2867e_b.jpg ----- |
1 Attachment(s)
Not vintage, but I had to laugh. Told my son I picked up a Giant Boulder and he said he thought I had a bad hip...
|
Grabbed this pretty cool tabletop model for $5. Working pedals,cranks,and wheels. lol
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4588/...c293a42a_c.jpgIMG_3215 by 2cam16, on Flickr https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4640/...fec303b2_c.jpgIMG_3216 by 2cam16, on Flickr |
Very cool!
Originally Posted by 2cam16
(Post 20088567)
Grabbed this pretty cool tabletop model for $5. Working pedals,cranks,and wheels. lol
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4588/...c293a42a_c.jpgIMG_3215 by 2cam16, on Flickr https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4640/...fec303b2_c.jpgIMG_3216 by 2cam16, on Flickr |
Pretty cool, but you need to pump those tires and adjust that chain...
|
I just went out to the trash and found this in it:
decent little kid's bike! https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4645/...0308edc2_z.jpg |
Originally Posted by curbtender
(Post 20088611)
Pretty cool, but you need to pump those tires and adjust that chain...
|
|
That Miyata Le Mans
Originally Posted by tiredhands
(Post 20029719)
Turns out there’s a bicycle junkyard here in town. It was a dangerous discovery. Mostly Huffys and American Flyers, but there are some gems in there in varying states of decay.
First haul: 1989 Cannondale SR400, 1979 Miyata Lemans Course, and a Schwinn Mesa Runner. The Miyata is neat, as far as I can tell it’s from Japan, made for the Japanese market. https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4520/...4663c9b1_c.jpg |
Crappy pic, but oh well:
https://i.imgur.com/jAcZp8s.jpg?1 '85 Cannondale ST500. All original except the seat. I have one stashed away for it. I have no idea what's up the aero bars on an ST. They're already gone. |
3 Attachment(s)
Not a bike but three sets of 27" wheels.
These were atop of a trash pile on my way home from work last night. Two are serated edge steel rims, one set is clearly marked Rigida, the other just says Made in France. The third set is newer, Quando hubs and Araya alloy single wall rims. All have good tires and tubes and are perfectly true. I can't figure why anyone would just throw them away. They each have string tied to them and years of dust as if they were hanging somewhere for decades. The rest of the trash pile was just junk furniture, the press board kind. The set with the red label IRC tires are most likely from an old Peugeot UO8 or similar, the other pair of rims are older. The hubs are dated on the first pair as being 1977. I'm glad I got them before some scrap guy happened along. |
Originally Posted by nesteel
(Post 20098856)
Crappy pic, but oh well:
https://i.imgur.com/jAcZp8s.jpg?1 '85 Cannondale ST500. All original except the seat. I have one stashed away for it. I have no idea what's up the aero bars on an ST. They're already gone. |
Originally Posted by oldlugs
(Post 20101068)
Not a bike but three sets of 27" wheels.
These were atop of a trash pile on my way home from work last night. Two are serated edge steel rims, one set is clearly marked Rigida, the other just says Made in France. The third set is newer, Quando hubs and Araya alloy single wall rims. All have good tires and tubes and are perfectly true. I can't figure why anyone would just throw them away. They each have string tied to them and years of dust as if they were hanging somewhere for decades. The rest of the trash pile was just junk furniture, the press board kind. The set with the red label IRC tires are most likely from an old Peugeot UO8 or similar, the other pair of rims are older. The hubs are dated on the first pair as being 1977. I'm glad I got them before some scrap guy happened along. |
Originally Posted by nesteel
(Post 20098856)
Crappy pic, but oh well:
https://i.imgur.com/jAcZp8s.jpg?1 '85 Cannondale ST500. All original except the seat. I have one stashed away for it. I have no idea what's up the aero bars on an ST. They're already gone. |
Originally Posted by 3speedslow
(Post 20101493)
Nice save! What are the hub sets? Are the spokes SS? Even if you don't use them on builds they will make good rolling project wheels.
I never ran across anything Quando before, I assume its a newer brand? I thought the rims were Araya but I found a Weinmann stamping on them after cleaning off the layers of dust. My guess is they're a stock replacement set someone bought at some point not so much a pair taken off any particular bike. I have at least one French frame in my size I can build up with one pair of the Rigida rims. |
That a win all around.
|
Originally Posted by 2cam16
(Post 20088567)
Grabbed this pretty cool tabletop model for $5. Working pedals,cranks,and wheels. lol
|
Originally Posted by 2cam16
(Post 20088567)
Grabbed this pretty cool tabletop model for $5. Working pedals,cranks,and wheels. lol
https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4588/...c293a42a_c.jpg IMG_3215 by 2cam16, on Flickr https://farm5.staticflickr.com/4640/...fec303b2_c.jpg IMG_3216 by 2cam16, on Flickr And the great thing about these is that they don't take up nearly as much room as one in my size. I mean, if you're going to buy a bike that's too small to ride, you might as well go really small. :) As a matter of fact I've joined that trend recently. 30 cents I think I paid for it. Even the brake adjusters work better than on my big bikes. https://myalbum.com/photo/bxJNKlaYP7wH/1k0.jpg |
Originally Posted by mathstudent
(Post 20102407)
That is insanely cool. Looks pretty decent sized as well.
|
Originally Posted by non-fixie
(Post 20102409)
Really nice! Dig those pedals.
And the great thing about these is that they don't take up nearly as much room as one in my size. I mean, if you're going to buy a bike that's too small to ride, you might as well go really small. :) As a matter of fact I've joined that trend recently. 30 cents I think I paid for it. Even the brake adjusters work better than on my big bikes. https://myalbum.com/photo/bxJNKlaYP7wH/1k0.jpg |
10 Attachment(s)
I drove by the same place I found all those wheels the other day, (second trash day of the week), and found more wheels, this time I went and knocked on the door. It was earlier and the lights were on so I took the chance.
The guy said he used to have sort of a bike shop in his garage 40 years ago but quit doing it after he got arthritis real bad. I asked if he was planning on putting any other wheels or parts out and he told me to hold on while he got his coat. We went out to his 3 car garage behind the house and he opened the door. The place is packed, basically a full bike shop as it sat 40 years ago. I asked him what he was looking to do with it all, and he told me I haven't seen it all yet, we went down the basement through a pair of Bilco doors and the basement is about half full too. The basement is full of complete bikes, some wheels hanging from the floor joists, and shelves all around the sides full of parts. He grilled me on what I would do with all the parts, when I said I've been doing sort of the same thing for years, only with used junk, he said if I take the parts, he best not find them on for sale on eBay. He'd like to see them put to use. The problem is most of the bikes are just plain bikes, nothing special, not department store junk, but most are all steel bikes, a lot of single speeds, mostly built from mismatched parts, a few dozen steel wheel road bikes, (Ross Europas, Columbia, Royce Union, Sears, Nishiki Sport, low end Gitanes, and similar bikes plus roughly 40 or so frames, all for the same type of bikes. The wheels are mostly new or in really nice shape, his truing stand was homemade from a pair of old Schwinn forks, and most of this tools are cheap junk from Taiwan. He did have two vintage BB style VAR bike stands. The garage is a mess of parts, handle bars and stems, cranksets, and wheels hanging everywhere, probably another 70 bikes or so lined up side by side in four or five rows with a few laying atop the mess, plus whatever is upstairs packed in the attic of the garage. He took me out to a tin shed, made from one of those carports you buy for $800 on CL, that had another 150 or so bikes packed in there plus a pile of used tires, used rear racks, frames, and forks hanging all over the place, and a few nicer bikes out by the plywood doors that look like they've been used more recently. There are tubs, cans, jars, and boxes of used parts all over the place, under benches, on shelves, and in Rubbermaid tubs marked with faded masking tape that's long since fallen off. After I looked around a bit he asked me if I was interested in it all, not being sure what to say I asked what he had in mind? He told me that so long as I didn't plan to just sell it all on eBay or scrap it, and so long as I take it all, I can have it. The issue is that most of it is low to mid end parts, much of it in really nice shape but nothing really desirable. The best bikes I saw were a few later Raleigh mountain bikes, a few steel wheel Nishiki sports, a couple Columbia three speeds, a few old 50's balloon tire bikes, but they were all repainted with a brush, but likely ridable and serviced from what I could tell. The few I grabbed from the pile in the basement were well adjusted and working bikes, those outside are not, those are waiting to be fixed or worked on. Those in the shed are a bit nicer but still, nothing high end, no Reynold 531, most likely nothing even Chromoly unless its just 4130. 70% of all the wheels are steel, on and off the bikes, there's a few nicer wheelsets, probably a few dozen new old stock 27" rims, not a 700c in the lot. Something that did catch my eye was a pair of Made in Italy internal hub 26" three speeds, I couldn't get around to the front of them but the seat post was clearly marked made in Italy, the rims were serrated edge chrome steel with wide Pirelli whitewall tires. The seat post decal reads Edoardo Bianchi, Milano. I also found a couple pairs of new old stock steel rims, marked made in France, in 650B size but they're super wide, 50+ mm wide, as if they took a balloon tire. There's also see what I think is an early French three speed but with a three speed derailleur set up, its powder blue, with an ivory head tube, pretty ornate lugs, and steel serated sidewall rims in 650B size, but the tires are maybe 35mm wide. I told the guy I'll take it, I'm not sure where I'll put it yet but I told him I want to load the parts first, then the bikes and frames. That way I get to pack the parts on shelves before getting jammed up with bikes. I suppose many of the frames and bikes are just junk, not worth messing with. Nice bikes don't sell well here, let alone old cheaper bikes. Price don't seem to matter, I've seen really nice bikes for cheap just sit unsold for years, its just not a bike area. I loaded up my pickup taking what he had on the trash pile plus anything decent I could grab and toss in the bed without upsetting the whole place. I'll go back this weekend with my enclosed car trailer and see how much I can pack in there. I figure there's three trailer loads or more if I pack the trailer well. The parts won't take up much room, and I already spotted a few new boxes of SA shifters, boxes of axles, pedals, chains, and such that I'll just put on my shelves here. I've got an upper storage area at my shop I can stash some stuff too, but the real low end frames and old bikes may just have to get donated or something. I can't figure anyone having much interest in a Columbia or Ross 10 speed, especially 24" and 26" models. If they won't bring $50 or better, I can't see storing them. Its a borderline hoarder situation but I think he more or less was just buying up bikes, fixing them up and selling them cheap back in the day. He has a really good assortment of general parts, but its parts mostly for single speed bikes. The type of bikes the local kids likely rode in the 50's and 60's. It is organized, but just overflowing with unfixed bikes, as if he kept buying long after he stopped fixing. The prices on the fixed bikes range from $5 to $40, nothing higher, which gives a good idea of what he was selling. Most are under $15 on the tags. Here's a few pics of the rims I grabbed in the dark last night, 1- Pair of Newsboy type balloon tire wheels, 105ga spokes. 2- Pair of unknown 27" alloy rims spoked with SS straight gauge spokes and Sunshine hubs 3- drum brake Rubbermaid/Skyway BMX wheels, new with new Carlisle knobby tires. 4- several dozen of these Made in Italy 26" rims, they appear to be 1 3/8" size but I haven't checked. (Marked only 26" but they're too big to be mtb. Note the $6.75 price he had on them. He said he doubled all prices from wholesale, so he paid half of that. 5- Pair of steel mountain bike or cruiser wheels with vintage CST tires and black chrome finish and Shimano 333 steel hubs. 6&7- Weinmann NOS 17x630 (27" wheelsets, with vintage red label IRC tires from the mid 70's) 8- Schwinn frame, Speedster? 26x1 3/8" style with stuck seat post? 9- Pile of steel frames, many more like this. I grabbed this pile because I saw the Trek frame, a tall Nishiki frame, and a couple of French frames. Plus what appears to be an old King Sting frame. Most have forks but those are in 5 gallon buckets all over the place. 10- DEA serrated sidewal steel rims made in France? Marked 32-630, (27", with a pair of mid 70's hard but surviving gumwall CST red label tires most likely from the same period as the rims. Any idea on what this brand rim came on? (DEA Super Chrome) They have Simplex hubs and each rim is stamped 1974 as are the hubs. These hubs are identical to the standard Normandy hubs but with the Simplex flying wing logo. These have straight gauge spokes with very short unplated nipples with an 'R' between each flat. They look similar to Rigida rims but have a lesser serration on the sidewalls and have better chrome. The skewers are also Simplex. |
8 Attachment(s)
Another pile I didn't get pics of yet is a pickup load of misc fenders, there has to be 100 pair, plus a few dozen vintage new old stock fender sets. There's at least 50 decent wheelsets, although most are steel. There's two 6ft tall drawer steel cabinets, (think library card file size drawers), full of misc new parts, ND hubs, kits, pedal parts, headsets, bb's, bearings, etc. He told me to just wheel the cabinets out whole, along with the tools and benches if I want. He want's his wife to be able to park in the garage when I'm done.
I'm trying to get the carport shed too, if that goes with the deal, then I'll have some immediate storage here right away. I think I can brace up the single car carport with wood and carry it slowly in one piece, its only a few miles or so down back roads. I'll do it in the wee hours of the morning so there's no traffic and park it in my yard once the sun comes up. Its 10' tall in the center, my trailer deck is 28" off the ground, it may just work if I rig it up right. If nothing else, I'll have a shady place to park my car in the driveway when I'm done. Here's a few more pics: 1- New old stock Normandy Hubs 2- Ross dealer sign 3- 70's Schwinn Typhoon This is probably the best looking of the whole bikes, I grabbed it because it was by the door and it looked like someone was riding it at some point and parking it there. It also helped to hold down several bundles of tires I tossed in the truck that were hanging on the walls there. 4- 30+ year old Cycle Pro tires on Rigida steel rims 5- Park Stand head, (This is all I found so far. Plus a vintage Bendix hub 6&7- Araya 27" wheel single - odd rim with no mate, I'm sure there will be plenty more single wheels with no match. 8- Araya wheelset with Japanese 'Chair' brand steel hubs? Never heard of this brand hub before, its no doubt low end but what bikes used them? Maybe an old Ross? There seems to be quite a few Ross bikes in the lot, but they were popular around here back in the day. Ross, Columbia, Rollfast, and Peugeot were the most common brands around back in the 70's, with a few Schwinn, Raleigh, Motobecane, and Panasonic bikes here and there. |
Wow, that's quite the stash you came upon.
If it were me, I'd take it all, assemble as many complete bikes as I could from all that, stash some wheelsets, have the local co-op take what they want, and scrap the rest. The only thing I'd be concerned about is becoming this guy--in 20 years somebody knocking on my door to ask about the giant pile of parts I didn't know what to do with. Have fun! |
[MENTION=214576]oldlugs[/MENTION] That puts a new meaning on "catch of the day!"
|
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 02:36 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.