For the love of English 3 speeds...
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" He says there's likely going to be more, he's cleaning out some old garage somewhere but wouldn't say where. I gave him another bucket full of old cans. (I can keep trading old aluminum cans for bike parts for a long time, I've been saving aluminum cans for 30 years, there's a dozen or so 55 gallon barrels down back full of crushed cans)."
You are indeed a very rich man, but your wealth may not last long - plan for the future.
You are indeed a very rich man, but your wealth may not last long - plan for the future.
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Bikes: 1971 Hercules, 1978 Raleigh Superbe, 1978 Raleigh Tourist, 1964 Glider 3 Speed, 1967 Raleigh Sprite 5 Speed, 1968 Hercules AMF 3 Speed, 1972 Raleigh Superbe, 1976 Raleigh Superbe, 1957 Flying Pigeon, 1967 Dunelt 3 Speed
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Looks slightly overinflated

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1987 Mercian Pro, 1985 Shogun 500, 197? Falcon San Remo, 1972 Peugeot PX-10, 1972 Schwinn Paramount P13-9, 1971 Peugeot PX-10, 1971 Raleigh International, 1970 Raleigh Professional Mark I
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
1987 Mercian Pro, 1985 Shogun 500, 197? Falcon San Remo, 1972 Peugeot PX-10, 1972 Schwinn Paramount P13-9, 1971 Peugeot PX-10, 1971 Raleigh International, 1970 Raleigh Professional Mark I
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
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Bikes: 1971 Hercules, 1978 Raleigh Superbe, 1978 Raleigh Tourist, 1964 Glider 3 Speed, 1967 Raleigh Sprite 5 Speed, 1968 Hercules AMF 3 Speed, 1972 Raleigh Superbe, 1976 Raleigh Superbe, 1957 Flying Pigeon, 1967 Dunelt 3 Speed
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Not sure on the fenders. The fender braces are solid aluminum, sort of half round in shape. The sheetmetal is identical to a painted set on any other Raleigh or Raleigh built bike with one exception, these are 3mm wider overall. The small chrome tip is the same as well.
The chainguard is a cheap Wald replacement, not sure why, its got two tabs up front for the hockey stick shaped Raleigh guard on it.
I pumped up the tires again and for some reason they held air this time, when I pumped them up yesterday when I first brought it home they were flat in a few hours. They seem to be fine now a day later though.
They need to be replaced, they're so dry rotted they crackle and crunch as you ride. The rear tire is shedding bits of rubber off the sidewalls leaving just patches of the inner cords.
The chrome looks like it'll clean up great and the wheels are pretty much perfect with the only issue being that the spokes are sort of black in color and it won't rub off. Its as if the zinc coating turned dark, mostly just on the rear wheel.
I removed the rusty, partially seized chain and stuck it in a bath of Evapo-Rust last night and by this afternoon it was rust free and every link was freed up. I hosed it off, blew it off with air and oiled it up. I'll have to go through the BB, Headset and hubs but so far its looking like decent bike.
I'm guessing someone likely took a 1971-72 Raleigh Sports frame set and built it up with the parts from something from 1965. Maybe a lesser brand like a Hercules, Robin Hood, or such.
The pump cleaned up pretty nice too, its got some pitting but its presentable and it still pumps are, although the hose isn't likely long for this world.
I may just strip the bike down and take all the chrome outside and hose it down with some wire wheel cleaner to brighten it up in a hurry, its faster than waiting for the Evapo-Rust to work and it leaves a much shinier result, you just have to get after it faster once its dry so it don't rust up right away.
Even the saddle is in decent shape, the cover is unripped, but I found the Brooks metal tag tied to the bottom of the inside of the saddle with some string.
The padded vinyl saddle is most like what you would see on a newer Sprite 10 speed, the fenders are still an unknown, the rims are Dunlop Endrick style, the rear hub is dated 2-65, and they didn't show brown as a paint option until 1970, and the tires are not Raleigh branded but Dunlop Sprite branded and likely older than the wheelset.
The kickstand is steel, its not Wald but similar, but marked "Made in England". I'm not sure if its just a sloppy poor design or just the wrong stand for the bike, it flips too far forward to be stable and if the handle bars flop over, the bike teeter's on falling over on the left side as it pivots around the stand with the back wheel nearly off the ground. It folds up nicely but goes too far forward and reaches too far outward. I may swap it for a twin leg center stand.
The same guy came back today with several piles of old bike parts, one is a 20 gallon trash can full or bike stems and kickstands, which are a combination of old road bike and British bike parts, and two old TV boxes full of old chrome British crank sets, and two 30 gallon kitchen trash cans full of miscellaneous used bike parts that have been bagged in super heavy zip lock bags and marked with various bike model names. He says there's likely going to be more, he's cleaning out some old garage somewhere but wouldn't say where. I gave him another bucket full of old cans. (I can keep trading old aluminum cans for bike parts for a long time, I've been saving aluminum cans for 30 years, there's a dozen or so 55 gallon barrels down back full of crushed cans).
I asked if there were any more bikes and he said there's a few hanging in the rafters he hasn't gotten to yet. I told him to bring any bike parts here before going to the scrap yard.



The chainguard is a cheap Wald replacement, not sure why, its got two tabs up front for the hockey stick shaped Raleigh guard on it.
I pumped up the tires again and for some reason they held air this time, when I pumped them up yesterday when I first brought it home they were flat in a few hours. They seem to be fine now a day later though.
They need to be replaced, they're so dry rotted they crackle and crunch as you ride. The rear tire is shedding bits of rubber off the sidewalls leaving just patches of the inner cords.
The chrome looks like it'll clean up great and the wheels are pretty much perfect with the only issue being that the spokes are sort of black in color and it won't rub off. Its as if the zinc coating turned dark, mostly just on the rear wheel.
I removed the rusty, partially seized chain and stuck it in a bath of Evapo-Rust last night and by this afternoon it was rust free and every link was freed up. I hosed it off, blew it off with air and oiled it up. I'll have to go through the BB, Headset and hubs but so far its looking like decent bike.
I'm guessing someone likely took a 1971-72 Raleigh Sports frame set and built it up with the parts from something from 1965. Maybe a lesser brand like a Hercules, Robin Hood, or such.
The pump cleaned up pretty nice too, its got some pitting but its presentable and it still pumps are, although the hose isn't likely long for this world.
I may just strip the bike down and take all the chrome outside and hose it down with some wire wheel cleaner to brighten it up in a hurry, its faster than waiting for the Evapo-Rust to work and it leaves a much shinier result, you just have to get after it faster once its dry so it don't rust up right away.
Even the saddle is in decent shape, the cover is unripped, but I found the Brooks metal tag tied to the bottom of the inside of the saddle with some string.
The padded vinyl saddle is most like what you would see on a newer Sprite 10 speed, the fenders are still an unknown, the rims are Dunlop Endrick style, the rear hub is dated 2-65, and they didn't show brown as a paint option until 1970, and the tires are not Raleigh branded but Dunlop Sprite branded and likely older than the wheelset.
The kickstand is steel, its not Wald but similar, but marked "Made in England". I'm not sure if its just a sloppy poor design or just the wrong stand for the bike, it flips too far forward to be stable and if the handle bars flop over, the bike teeter's on falling over on the left side as it pivots around the stand with the back wheel nearly off the ground. It folds up nicely but goes too far forward and reaches too far outward. I may swap it for a twin leg center stand.
The same guy came back today with several piles of old bike parts, one is a 20 gallon trash can full or bike stems and kickstands, which are a combination of old road bike and British bike parts, and two old TV boxes full of old chrome British crank sets, and two 30 gallon kitchen trash cans full of miscellaneous used bike parts that have been bagged in super heavy zip lock bags and marked with various bike model names. He says there's likely going to be more, he's cleaning out some old garage somewhere but wouldn't say where. I gave him another bucket full of old cans. (I can keep trading old aluminum cans for bike parts for a long time, I've been saving aluminum cans for 30 years, there's a dozen or so 55 gallon barrels down back full of crushed cans).
I asked if there were any more bikes and he said there's a few hanging in the rafters he hasn't gotten to yet. I told him to bring any bike parts here before going to the scrap yard.



Junior Member
He knows where to bring them. He cleaned out a place last fall that was full of Stihl chainsaws, He brought me 20 or so that were in excellent condition, plus a small chainsaw milling fixture. Last summer I trade him a 55 gal. barrel full of aluminum cans for a truck load of steel parts room shelving and 9 sections of pallet racking like they use in Home Depot.He cleaned out a defunct electronics store somewhere and they had TV's stored on the heavier racks and the rest was all small appliances and parts in the back. I used the pallet racking all around the outside walls in my basement, and across the back wall of the garage at my other house, and shelved out about 1/2 of my basement and the whole upstairs of my garage. Its nice when my old beer cans can buy something I can use.
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A Couple of recent postings on Kijiji, Toronto

Listed as a 1955 Mercury 3 speed for $80.00!

I've not heard of the Mercury brand before.

Her-cu-matic trigger and hub.
Then there's this rare treasure

Listed as a Raleigh 2 Speed, it can be yours for a mere $1000.00!
I believe the tires hold air.

Listed as a 1955 Mercury 3 speed for $80.00!

I've not heard of the Mercury brand before.

Her-cu-matic trigger and hub.
Then there's this rare treasure

Listed as a Raleigh 2 Speed, it can be yours for a mere $1000.00!
I believe the tires hold air.
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Durability of Old Raleigh Chainrings
I ride my 1952 Raleigh regularly. Right now we're probably covering about 300 miles a month.
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
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I ride my 1952 Raleigh regularly. Right now we're probably covering about 300 miles a month.
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
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I ride my 1952 Raleigh regularly. Right now we're probably covering about 300 miles a month.
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
Senior Member
It may not be the most attractive bike. But I don't think it's unattractive, either. I get that this is a classic and vintage sub-forum, and most folks on this thread wish that a modern bike company would just simply make a bike that looks exactly like an old Raleigh Sports. But let's be realistic: That ain't going to happen. And especially not from a major/mainstream maker like Raleigh. If you want a modern three speed that approximates ye olde Raleigh Sports, I'd go for a Linus or Public.
As for tires, I like wider, fatter tires. Much as I love 26" x 1 3/8", you are limited to a width of 35 to 40 mm. I prefer wider. I love 26" x 2.0" or slightly fatter. I'll be building up a fatter-tire three speed at some point.
I know some folks (esp. in C&V) recoil from disc brakes the same way vampires recoil from garlic, but they work. And they definitely work scads better than what's stock on your 1965 Raleigh Sports, especially if you want braking power when it's wet out. I realize you can modernize brakes on old three-speeds, and I have: aluminum rims, Kool Stop pads, Tektro 559s. They work well, but definitely not as good as a disc brake bike. Plus, I ever have to clean dirty rims on a disc brake bike. So I can see why a modern company would spec them.
In a perfect world, I'd love to see everyone riding on a mid-century British three speed. And I love seeing people discover these bikes and refurbish them. But I'm also pragmatic, and appreciate that modern makers would even make a bike like this. If people ride it and derive pleasure from the experience, all the better. Maybe they'll consider a vintage three speed next?
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I ride my 1952 Raleigh regularly. Right now we're probably covering about 300 miles a month.
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
Unfortunately, I'm a worrier, and I worry about wearing down the chainring. I know the old steel chainrings are more durable than alloy chainrings, but I seem to need to replace those on my other bikes every 5 - 10 years or so, as the teeth wear. Unless I missed something when I was working on the bike, the chainring is integral to the crank right? Once it wears down, I have to find both a new chainring and a new crankarm. Is this something I should consider and ride my other bikes more often, or does the steel chainring really last indefinitely compared to an alloy chainring?
Thanks!
Paul Cooley
Santa Fe
I finished the route, went home and figured I'd better fix the problems so I had it ready for the next day. I fiddled with the fender stay and fender and got them back where they belonged, I took the brake lever apart and bent it back in shape, as well as changing the rear brake cable. I checked the front wheel, found a spoke had popped, so i pulled the wheel, found a good used spoke off a parts bike and put that back together. Everything worked, so I called it a day and went to bed. It wasn't for a few months that I realized that it didn't look right, and a closer look made me realize I had bent the frame, the top tube and down tube had buckled when it hit that wall. It didn't feel the same after that but it did the job. I kept using that bike for another 2 or three years after that finally retiring it after finding a crack in the rear rim between three spokes, and another around the bottom bracket lug where the down tube entered the lug. It barely made it home the last day I used it, the downtube had all but separated from the lug. I had used some bailing twine a farmer gave me to bind the whole thing together so I could finish that day. The bike was old when I got it, and likely had done the same thing years before. I never really figured how many miles that bike had on it but it was 'well worn' to say the least. Over the course of 6 years, the bike broke two handle bars, 7 cables, went through 11 tires, 20+ tubes, eventually lost the lower parts of both fenders to rust, and I rebuilt the bottom bracket twice after wearing through the cups twice.
The headset was an issue, which was likely due to the damaged frame. The bike hung in my dads garage for years, but was gone when I moved back here 6 years ago.
With all that bike went through, the sprockets were never an issue, I never recalled having a problem with the sprockets showing any real wear. I did break a few chain links and seem to remember the chain had several master links added to hold it together but when your in your teens, a new chain just wasn't in the budget. I did make enough money delivering papers to buy me a new Raleigh Super Course in 1977, which I still own, and a used 57 Plymouth sedan for $200 in 1979 which I drove for a few years in school before finding a deal on a super clean old VW Beetle. Knowing what I know now, I likely would have fixed that old BSA, I seem to remember the hub being dated 9-51. When I first got it, it had old black handgrips that would turn your hands black if you touched them. I think I tried everything to not have to buy new grips, I even painted them but when the handle bars broke one day, the grips were non removable and got replaced with some used grips off of a Raleigh Sprite a buddy had who had converted it to drop bars. The bike always seemed prone to rust, for the whole time I was using it I was constantly sanding and touching up rusty spots that blistered through the paint or polishing rust speckles off the chrome bits. The bike had a creaking sound as it rolled from the day I started using it that I never found, it could have been the frame flexing or maybe there was already a crack starting from day one, but considering it carried both a daily load of newpapers and my 240 or so lbs for all those years over rough roads, dirt and through several crashes, I had no complaints at all. The thing was built like a tank.
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Oldspokes wrote:
"New tires also don't fit the same. I fought with a set of reproduction chain treaded tires on an old BF Goodrich bike the other day, it took me a hour to get them to finally pop up and fit right on the rim. The tire was just slightly smaller than the original around the bead, so much so that it didn't want to seat properly, and even after the first ride, the tire slipped back down off the bead area. I ended up having to sand the bead rubber a bit and lube up the bead area to get the tire to finally seat right. I never had a set of tires fight me like that before."
Some of the Asian tire manufactures use some of the more obscure British tire specs that don't make any sense at all and never did. Back in the day it was well understood that 26.5 and 26 1/2 were not remotely similar! There is in fact a 1/4 inch(6mm) difference. 24 inch was a good 4 inches away from 2 feet wide. BITD if you'd ask for a Junior size tire everyone had some of those, the fact that were actually 20 inches wide (520mm) was obvious to everyone with half a brain!. Even the venerable 26 1 3/8 has 4 mm differences - " oh you want 26 inch for British sprint rims, why didn't you say so in the bloody first place?" (there was a a 1/6 inch difference in diameter !) In China, Vietnam, Malaysia whatever they make 100 of millions of tires that to them are standard to what they reverse engineered 70 years ago. The 'Hero' bike throughout Asia that was the workhorse of the Ho Chi Minh trail in the 50s and 60s was a copy of the British Phillips that had 28 inch tires ( they weren't even 27 inches wide?!!) and you don't want to go into the lunacy of specs on any of those 28 and 27 inch tires. Ask for the ISO number. All manufacturers have the ISO number embossed on the tire wall (the diameter measured from bead to bead across the tire) and this measurement is as accurate to a millimetre or so.
"New tires also don't fit the same. I fought with a set of reproduction chain treaded tires on an old BF Goodrich bike the other day, it took me a hour to get them to finally pop up and fit right on the rim. The tire was just slightly smaller than the original around the bead, so much so that it didn't want to seat properly, and even after the first ride, the tire slipped back down off the bead area. I ended up having to sand the bead rubber a bit and lube up the bead area to get the tire to finally seat right. I never had a set of tires fight me like that before."
Some of the Asian tire manufactures use some of the more obscure British tire specs that don't make any sense at all and never did. Back in the day it was well understood that 26.5 and 26 1/2 were not remotely similar! There is in fact a 1/4 inch(6mm) difference. 24 inch was a good 4 inches away from 2 feet wide. BITD if you'd ask for a Junior size tire everyone had some of those, the fact that were actually 20 inches wide (520mm) was obvious to everyone with half a brain!. Even the venerable 26 1 3/8 has 4 mm differences - " oh you want 26 inch for British sprint rims, why didn't you say so in the bloody first place?" (there was a a 1/6 inch difference in diameter !) In China, Vietnam, Malaysia whatever they make 100 of millions of tires that to them are standard to what they reverse engineered 70 years ago. The 'Hero' bike throughout Asia that was the workhorse of the Ho Chi Minh trail in the 50s and 60s was a copy of the British Phillips that had 28 inch tires ( they weren't even 27 inches wide?!!) and you don't want to go into the lunacy of specs on any of those 28 and 27 inch tires. Ask for the ISO number. All manufacturers have the ISO number embossed on the tire wall (the diameter measured from bead to bead across the tire) and this measurement is as accurate to a millimetre or so.
Last edited by Johno59; 06-06-20 at 01:27 AM.
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Nice Rudge,but.....
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/1950-s-Ru...edirect=mobile
Hi.
The bike looks nice,but Endrick rims with rod-operated brakes(rubber blocks)? Potentially dangerous,I think. Has any one tried something like this before? 🤔
Cheers and take care.
W.L.SOON,Malaysia
Hi.
The bike looks nice,but Endrick rims with rod-operated brakes(rubber blocks)? Potentially dangerous,I think. Has any one tried something like this before? 🤔
Cheers and take care.
W.L.SOON,Malaysia
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https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/1950-s-Ru...edirect=mobile
Hi.
The bike looks nice,but Endrick rims with rod-operated brakes(rubber blocks)? Potentially dangerous,I think. Has any one tried something like this before? 🤔
Cheers and take care.
W.L.SOON,Malaysia
Hi.
The bike looks nice,but Endrick rims with rod-operated brakes(rubber blocks)? Potentially dangerous,I think. Has any one tried something like this before? 🤔
Cheers and take care.
W.L.SOON,Malaysia
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Another bike from the junkman, a smaller frame Robin Hood.
It had a GB stem and drop bars when I first got it, I pulled them off since they were loose.
I think this bike has the wheels that belong on the Raleigh Sports I posted about earlier here, and the Chrome fenders and Endrick wheels likely came from this bike.
There's more stuff but I didn't start to dig through it yet.

It had a GB stem and drop bars when I first got it, I pulled them off since they were loose.
I think this bike has the wheels that belong on the Raleigh Sports I posted about earlier here, and the Chrome fenders and Endrick wheels likely came from this bike.
There's more stuff but I didn't start to dig through it yet.


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Another bike from the junkman, a smaller frame Robin Hood.
It had a GB stem and drop bars when I first got it, I pulled them off since they were loose.
I think this bike has the wheels that belong on the Raleigh Sports I posted about earlier here, and the Chrome fenders and Endrick wheels likely came from this bike.
There's more stuff but I didn't start to dig through it yet.


It had a GB stem and drop bars when I first got it, I pulled them off since they were loose.
I think this bike has the wheels that belong on the Raleigh Sports I posted about earlier here, and the Chrome fenders and Endrick wheels likely came from this bike.
There's more stuff but I didn't start to dig through it yet.


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Just back from a quick 30min ride. Rode great. Its been in the garage for a year but thanks to this stupid virus ive been able to work and ride it alot lately. 1976 Raleigh Sports. I may have to invert the bars though...i rode drop bars for a longtime and it just suits me better, I figure that's a nice compromise.
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Here's a few more from the lot I got last night, a 1974 Raleigh LTD III with a 24" frame, A 1966 Robin Hood Sports also 24", and an AMF Hercules from 1971.
These three are the best of the lot yet, the saddles are rough, but the rest of the bikes are basically functional with some air in the tires. They're extremely dirty from sitting in some garage for decades but they're not rusty. The Robin Hood has Lucas Odometer that reads 170 miles, and it works.
The LTD has Raleigh branded tires, the front reads Raleigh Record, the rear reads Raleigh but appears to be some type of slick, the tire is smooth with a slight raised center. The Hercules has Dunlop tires, the Robin Hood has two older Carlisle tires. The Robin Hood rides nice, the Hercules is great too but I really like the taller frames.
The LTD needs some adjustments, the brakes are rubbing, the fenders are loose, etc. It does shift and pedal just fine though. The Robin Hood is really nice riding bike. All three have perfect wheels.The Robin Hood's chainguard is a bit dented up but I can fix that.
There's at least one more Raleigh in the lot that I haven't taken pics of yet, an early 50's ladies model but its pretty rough and likely just a parts bike. Along with these bikes, the same guy also brought me 9 more barrels of parts they cleaned out of the same place.


These three are the best of the lot yet, the saddles are rough, but the rest of the bikes are basically functional with some air in the tires. They're extremely dirty from sitting in some garage for decades but they're not rusty. The Robin Hood has Lucas Odometer that reads 170 miles, and it works.
The LTD has Raleigh branded tires, the front reads Raleigh Record, the rear reads Raleigh but appears to be some type of slick, the tire is smooth with a slight raised center. The Hercules has Dunlop tires, the Robin Hood has two older Carlisle tires. The Robin Hood rides nice, the Hercules is great too but I really like the taller frames.
The LTD needs some adjustments, the brakes are rubbing, the fenders are loose, etc. It does shift and pedal just fine though. The Robin Hood is really nice riding bike. All three have perfect wheels.The Robin Hood's chainguard is a bit dented up but I can fix that.
There's at least one more Raleigh in the lot that I haven't taken pics of yet, an early 50's ladies model but its pretty rough and likely just a parts bike. Along with these bikes, the same guy also brought me 9 more barrels of parts they cleaned out of the same place.



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Just back from a quick 30min ride. Rode great. Its been in the garage for a year but thanks to this stupid virus ive been able to work and ride it alot lately. 1976 Raleigh Sports. I may have to invert the bars though...i rode drop bars for a longtime and it just suits me better, I figure that's a nice compromise.
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Saw this on my local Craigslist. It’s a Norman. No price but has the goodies on it and the paint looks pretty good. Any possibility it’s from the 50’s based on paint style. https://stlouis.craigslist.org/bik/d...122987524.html

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@56ford. Late 50's, early 60's sure. Those spiral cable wraps were popular in the 50's. Chrome mudguards suggest closer to '60's. I'm sure the rear hub has a date on it to nail it down.
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@56ford. Late 50's, early 60's sure. Those spiral cable wraps were popular in the 50's. Chrome mudguards suggest closer to '60's. I'm sure the rear hub has a date on it to nail it down.
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It's certainly possible that it's earlier. A Google image search of '1950s Hercules bike' reveal mostly painted fenders with chrome usually appearing toward 1960. The problem with Hercs is getting the year correct when when many had undated Hercules 3 speed hubs. No matter, nice bikes regardless of year.
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It's certainly possible that it's earlier. A Google image search of '1950s Hercules bike' reveal mostly painted fenders with chrome usually appearing toward 1960. The problem with Hercs is getting the year correct when when many had undated Hercules 3 speed hubs. No matter, nice bikes regardless of year.