All Things FUJI
#451
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This is probably an S-5. You can't trust everything in the catalogs, and given there was an S-5L (ladies), I'm sure they made a mens version.
I love these old cruisers, sadly they never made them very large. I've seen a few nearly mint at very reasonable prices. An excellent utilitarian bicycle for the collection and for turning heads as you pick up some groceries.
I love these old cruisers, sadly they never made them very large. I've seen a few nearly mint at very reasonable prices. An excellent utilitarian bicycle for the collection and for turning heads as you pick up some groceries.

Now it's time to go find a few accessories (bell, panniers, seat etc)!

#452
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1984 club fuji special edition. This one was languishing on ebay as motivated seller went from 450 ask to 250, to make offer which I did. What was of interest is the "special edition". Ebay seller was original owner and bike sat in dallas area for last 30 years, so I figured it would be dry but hopefully rust free. Grainy pics made it look like a 61cm a size not terribly sought after but my preferred size in old steel. I have a 84 team and 85 club in 58cm for reference.
The bike showed up packed poorly, sad to say. Box was ripped open, one skewer poking through, etc. Bike appeared to have suffered a few fresh scratches during the trip, but as mentioned sometimes original sellers have no clue and take with a grain of salt. I can say the bike has other scratches of much older vintage but seems to be stock original. 30 years of dry sitting meant a heavy layer of dusty grease was imbedded on everything.
Serviced hubs, bb, headset, scrubbed everything with degreaser, new hoods, new wrap, rotated on rubino pro3 from 85 club which will get a fresh set next week. Adjusted everything as needed, still need to slightly true rear wheel. For picture sake I put on oem saddle and pedals though may rotate out for spd and existing saddle as desired.
Notes on the "special edition" Color is obviously different, headbadge is decal vs rivets on 84 team and 85 club but not sure how other 84 clubs were re headbadge. Special seems to have a gold theme, on cable tubing, freewheel, skewers, etc all have gold paint. Everything looks stock as per catalog otherwise, suntour arx, sugino, diacompe brakes/levers, fuji bb/headset, suntour shifters, etc
The bike showed up packed poorly, sad to say. Box was ripped open, one skewer poking through, etc. Bike appeared to have suffered a few fresh scratches during the trip, but as mentioned sometimes original sellers have no clue and take with a grain of salt. I can say the bike has other scratches of much older vintage but seems to be stock original. 30 years of dry sitting meant a heavy layer of dusty grease was imbedded on everything.
Serviced hubs, bb, headset, scrubbed everything with degreaser, new hoods, new wrap, rotated on rubino pro3 from 85 club which will get a fresh set next week. Adjusted everything as needed, still need to slightly true rear wheel. For picture sake I put on oem saddle and pedals though may rotate out for spd and existing saddle as desired.
Notes on the "special edition" Color is obviously different, headbadge is decal vs rivets on 84 team and 85 club but not sure how other 84 clubs were re headbadge. Special seems to have a gold theme, on cable tubing, freewheel, skewers, etc all have gold paint. Everything looks stock as per catalog otherwise, suntour arx, sugino, diacompe brakes/levers, fuji bb/headset, suntour shifters, etc
One thing I did notice, I have only one set of bottle holder mounts, yours has two, is that what set the special edition difference?
The only other think I can think of that would make it a truly special edition is if Fuji used the same Fuji 9658 Cromoly quad butted frame as the Professional, which means the bike was built to potentially be upgraded by the buyer to fit their needs, but even on the Professional it only came with one set of bottle mounts, which takes me back to wondering if the two bottle mounts you have is the reason given to have the Special decal attached.
Regardless you got a very nice bike for the money you spent, I hope you enjoy if for many years. Too bad about the shipping issue, common sense would have told me if I didn't know how to pack a bike for shipping I would have had an LBS do it...but that's just me!
Don't forget what I mentioned to you about that rear derailleur cable clamp bolt, don't tighten it too much or you could strip it, which was the only mechanical weak spot on the ARX system.
#453
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Hey thanks rekmeyata for that feedback and catch on water bottle detail. Both my 84 team and 85 club have dual water bottle mounts so did not realized 84 club had just one but looking at the catalog that does seem correct. Weird that the club seems to be odd bike out that year regarding dual mounts except for se. The 84 professional, opus and team do all appear to have dual mounts via classicfuji. The decal was also puzzling since as you noted riveted are usually more expensive. I do not know but seems like all frames, even lower end were riveted in this era? Not even sure how riveted badges were done on the assembly line, drilled on at end I guess, not forged during tube process right? Also the se lacks the fuji decals on fork.
All I could think of was that it was almost like Fuji had some extra tubes laying around and slapped the special edition together late in the year. I doubt the frame would have been hand touched like professional or opus but who knows? I did ride it yesterday for 30 miles, comfortable and solid a little more relaxed on the bigger frame since not a cramped cockpit like on the 58s. The gearing is set up for flats, took it up a few steep hills and it put a hurting on me, Will need to check freewheel sizing but a little harder climbing vs my other 2. Still a great find and glad to have gotten it back on the road after 30 years of baking away in TX.
All I could think of was that it was almost like Fuji had some extra tubes laying around and slapped the special edition together late in the year. I doubt the frame would have been hand touched like professional or opus but who knows? I did ride it yesterday for 30 miles, comfortable and solid a little more relaxed on the bigger frame since not a cramped cockpit like on the 58s. The gearing is set up for flats, took it up a few steep hills and it put a hurting on me, Will need to check freewheel sizing but a little harder climbing vs my other 2. Still a great find and glad to have gotten it back on the road after 30 years of baking away in TX.
Last edited by dailycommute; 06-12-14 at 10:25 AM.
#454
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Hey thanks rekmeyata for that feedback and catch on water bottle detail. Both my 84 team and 85 club have dual water bottle mounts so did not realized 84 club had just one but looking at the catalog that does seem correct. Weird that the club seems to be odd bike out that year regarding dual mounts except for se. The 84 professional, opus and team do all appear to have dual mounts via classicfuji. The decal was also puzzling since as you noted riveted are usually more expensive. I do not know but seems like all frames, even lower end were riveted in this era? Not even sure how riveted badges were done on the assembly line, drilled on at end I guess, not forged during tube process right? Also the se lacks the fuji decals on fork.
All I could think of was that it was almost like Fuji had some extra tubes laying around and slapped the special edition together late in the year. I doubt the frame would have been hand touched like professional or opus but who knows? I did ride it yesterday for 30 miles, comfortable and solid a little more relaxed on the bigger frame since not a cramped cockpit like on the 58s. The gearing is set up for flats, took it up a few steep hills and it put a hurting on me, Will need to check freewheel sizing but a little harder climbing vs my other 2. Still a great find and glad to have gotten it back on the road after 30 years of baking away in TX.
All I could think of was that it was almost like Fuji had some extra tubes laying around and slapped the special edition together late in the year. I doubt the frame would have been hand touched like professional or opus but who knows? I did ride it yesterday for 30 miles, comfortable and solid a little more relaxed on the bigger frame since not a cramped cockpit like on the 58s. The gearing is set up for flats, took it up a few steep hills and it put a hurting on me, Will need to check freewheel sizing but a little harder climbing vs my other 2. Still a great find and glad to have gotten it back on the road after 30 years of baking away in TX.
Your hill climbing hurts may me due to lack of higher rpm spinning? what is your cadence climbing the steep hill you spoke of?
The Sugino RT crank is capable of changing the small gear ring from a 42 to a 38 or maybe to a 33 if the BCD measures out to 110mm, and if you can find one! or get a Shimano rear cluster that will have a 28t 1st gear (more on this later).
There was a comment made some time ago on the internet about the Sugino RT having drill outs on the small gear ring to accept a third ring gear...mine does not have those drill outs, not sure why some RT's did and others did not. If you change your ring gear you probably have to change the large ring gear so as to limit the teeth spread to just 13t so you don't have a problem with the front derailleur handling it which means the large ring gear would have to be a 46 or 47, this is where the advice of a LBS mechanic familiar with vintage bikes may come in handy. Of course changing the gear rings to smaller rings will require up to 3 chain links removed, again another LBS mechanic thing if you're not sure on how to adjust it.
OR; you if you decide to change your rear cluster the max largest cog the ARX RD can handle is 28t and depending on the bikes set up maybe 26t which is what you now have, but I would suspect after looking at mine it should be able to handle a 28, this is where again a LBS mechanic can advise you.
The other option is to find another set of crank arms and get a 170m long instead of the factory 175 which may make it a tad easier to spin at higher cadences and thus taking the strain off the knees.
And the last option is to get Shimano BioPace ring gears if all the other options I mentioned get too complicated or difficult to find. BioPace ring gears do make a difference, I have those on a Miyata and they do seem to make it easier climbing grades, and I've heard it's easier on the knees, and brand new BioPace gears are available on E-bay.
Again take all that I said as just ideas and let an LBS mechanic hash out the right thing to do with the minimal outlay of cash. Always try to make any changes as cheap and as effective as you can, in other words walk away if the LBS starts wanting to sell you a completely new derailleur system, crank, gear cluster etc because "only that will work" nonsense. So find a mechanic with vintage knowledge and appreciation.
#455
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Hey guys I'm new around here. I'm new to road cycling (always rode BMX bikes in my younger days) and wanted to get something decent yet fairly inexpensive to try to motivate myself back into shape. I found this Fuji Tiara on Craigslist and couldn't pass it up. All in all it's in good shape besides the grips and lever hoods. Is it possible to still get replacement hoods for the levers? I believe to all be original except for the wheels and seat. I just picked it up last night, so I'll try to get some better pictures later.

#457
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vwfuji, nice Tiara and username. Here's mine that I just reincarnated about a week back.
#459
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#460
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#461
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A few pics of the 1984 Fuji Opus III. This bike was just below the Fuji Professional and has the same tubing and geometry. This is my second Opus III. Suntour Pro drop-outs, Fuji quad-butted tubing, fork tangs, etc.


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#463
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My '85 Team Fuji turns 30 this month (Date Code KJ4), so in its honor, I took it out for a 30 mile ride to see some sights. The bar tape is Cinelli Unica, probably from around 10 years ago. It had pink dots, so how could I not? Looks like the Exploratorium got some inspiration from it.
I know the dork disk is freakishly large, but these aren't the right wheels... Still looking for a suitable rear hub for the Araya 1W rim I got on ebay- original rear wheel was gone when I got the bike.
I don't find the riding position especially comfortable, but it's light, nimble and really fun to ride around the city.



I know the dork disk is freakishly large, but these aren't the right wheels... Still looking for a suitable rear hub for the Araya 1W rim I got on ebay- original rear wheel was gone when I got the bike.
I don't find the riding position especially comfortable, but it's light, nimble and really fun to ride around the city.




#464
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I had forgotten about this thread! I have to add my latest Fuji find! Either a late 74 or early build 75 "The Newest". The S/N says May of 1974, but has a series number of 10043. Somehow I don't believe they built 10,000+ of this model that year, so I am assuming it was the 43rd built for the 1975 year? Just thinking out loud really. Anyway, I have a few original parts on the way, with more to come. Some I already have, thank goodness. It's going to live again, it will just take a little time, money, and elbow grease.,,,,BD
I know, it looks pretty sad, but I am determined to bring it back...



I know, it looks pretty sad, but I am determined to bring it back...




Likes For Bikedued:
#465
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I had forgotten about this thread! I have to add my latest Fuji find! Either a late 74 or early build 75 "The Newest". The S/N says May of 1974, but has a series number of 10043. Somehow I don't believe they built 10,000+ of this model that year, so I am assuming it was the 43rd built for the 1975 year? Just thinking out loud really. Anyway, I have a few original parts on the way, with more to come. Some I already have, thank goodness. It's going to live again, it will just take a little time, money, and elbow grease.,,,,BD
Is that the weird seatpost with Cyrillic writing on it?
#468
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Actually, it means Super. I wrote a short blog post on it some time ago. Here's a link. https://vintagecrank.com/супер-hupel-...r-seat-pillar/
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This is my '84 Fuji Del Rey in the Star Silver color.
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Early Fuji Newest 1B — and Serial Numbers
[QUOTE=Bikedued;17492465]I had forgotten about this thread! I have to add my latest Fuji find! Either a late 74 or early build 75 "The Newest". The S/N says May of 1974, but has a series number of 10043. Somehow I don't believe they built 10,000+ of this model that year, so I am assuming it was the 43rd built for the 1975 year? Just thinking out loud really. Anyway, I have a few original parts on the way, with more to come. Some I already have, thank goodness. It's going to live again, it will just take a little time, money, and elbow grease.,,,,BD
Nice Newest. You have a sizable, but fully worthy, and unquestionably rewarding project ahead of you. Sometimes “we” refer to yours as the Newest 1B because it has the higher spec components, including the Gran Compe Center-pulls, the drilled out Mighty Compe Custom Sugino cranks and the all important PDL-M Suntour shifters and the V-Lux Rear Derailleur — the reverse Alloy Compe is icing on the cake. The hardest part to get, if you want to go original is the Fujita Suede saddle. Painfully hard to locate. In all Chrome this bicycles look sensational with leather wrap and the Fujta Professional saddle. The under-chrome is a masterstroke for these machines — it is all polished. As part of your frame is already stripped, I’d definitely finish off stripping the paint except for that lovely orange band — pretty stunning. But all the real deep joy resides in the ride, the early Newests are balanced to perfection, and the steel is sublime. Once you have one of these sorted and you go for your first ride, you will keep it forever. One thing, you might consider tubular tires (The Continental Sprinter Gatorskins have a similar feel to the original Soyo 90s) — its triple sublime.
Oh, yes, Serial numbers. Once you get past the “K,” the Showa Year, the Letter Month Code, and usually “1” — you have four more digits. I have compared numbers on about 25/30 Fuji Newest 1A and 1B models and it is not highly consistent. There are many 10032, or 10024, type of numbers, signifying 24 or 30 builds for that month, but these numbers sometimes taper off — and sometimes you just get a large digit, such as 18185. For the most part the pure system seemed to be a sequence beginning 100xx. Hard to say, and still researching, but there seems to be approximately 20 to 30 max builds, on average per month. A Newest shows up somewhere — CL, eBay, or here, about once per every five weeks to eight weeks. Sometimes as few as 4/5 a year, sometimes double that. They are jewels. Here’s one on Scott’s site buit to fairly high spec... If you search further there you’ll find his all chrome version. All best on the build!
1974 Fuji Newest "Blue Plate Specillisimo" - Vintage Fuji Archive
Nice Newest. You have a sizable, but fully worthy, and unquestionably rewarding project ahead of you. Sometimes “we” refer to yours as the Newest 1B because it has the higher spec components, including the Gran Compe Center-pulls, the drilled out Mighty Compe Custom Sugino cranks and the all important PDL-M Suntour shifters and the V-Lux Rear Derailleur — the reverse Alloy Compe is icing on the cake. The hardest part to get, if you want to go original is the Fujita Suede saddle. Painfully hard to locate. In all Chrome this bicycles look sensational with leather wrap and the Fujta Professional saddle. The under-chrome is a masterstroke for these machines — it is all polished. As part of your frame is already stripped, I’d definitely finish off stripping the paint except for that lovely orange band — pretty stunning. But all the real deep joy resides in the ride, the early Newests are balanced to perfection, and the steel is sublime. Once you have one of these sorted and you go for your first ride, you will keep it forever. One thing, you might consider tubular tires (The Continental Sprinter Gatorskins have a similar feel to the original Soyo 90s) — its triple sublime.
Oh, yes, Serial numbers. Once you get past the “K,” the Showa Year, the Letter Month Code, and usually “1” — you have four more digits. I have compared numbers on about 25/30 Fuji Newest 1A and 1B models and it is not highly consistent. There are many 10032, or 10024, type of numbers, signifying 24 or 30 builds for that month, but these numbers sometimes taper off — and sometimes you just get a large digit, such as 18185. For the most part the pure system seemed to be a sequence beginning 100xx. Hard to say, and still researching, but there seems to be approximately 20 to 30 max builds, on average per month. A Newest shows up somewhere — CL, eBay, or here, about once per every five weeks to eight weeks. Sometimes as few as 4/5 a year, sometimes double that. They are jewels. Here’s one on Scott’s site buit to fairly high spec... If you search further there you’ll find his all chrome version. All best on the build!
1974 Fuji Newest "Blue Plate Specillisimo" - Vintage Fuji Archive
#471
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#472
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Thank you for the vote of approval! Yes it is the original paint color and the frame was in great shape when I picket it up for a mere $40 from a landscaper. I wanted to tie the nice gold color of the "FUJI" on the ST into several components of the bike. I do really like how it turned out but it is a bit on the small side for me.
#473
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That is a great looking Royale! I actually have two red Royale's in mint condition that are just waiting for a little clean up love. I can't wait until I get to them. Really well done.
Hey Fujinians, Fujites, or whatever the term is...I finally earned my entrance to the 'All Things FUJI' thread!
My wife spotted a 1980 Fuji Royale sitting on the porch of the local "Re-Store." I didn't even bother to take a 'before' pic (you know what dogs these look like after years of neglect), but it was mostly original and mostly there. I think someone had ridden it for years in a trainer, as it had earmarks of that---deeply indexed headset, swapped out corncob freewheel, and burned up rear wheel. But it was worth a chance at $50, she figured.
Anyway, had a ball re-building this as a day tripper from parts I had lying around: New housings/cable, new bar tape, SR stem/headset, nitto bars, shimano bar ends, $15 shimano 14-30 freewheel from the LBS, 36-46 biopace given to me by a local bike buddy (int the mountains here!), Eclipse rack/Cannondale bag from an old Trek I bought last year, original "Fuji" (Suntour) Vx derailleurs, and added paselas to the 27" Ukai wheels. Repacked and rebuilt everything else, including the Diacompe 610 centerpulls which work very well.
My wife and I went for a 4th of July shake down ride this AM, and fortunately there were no fireworks! Maybe my taste is just exceedingly pedestrian, but I think this is a nice bike. Handles well, rides well, accelerates well, and is comfortable. Gonna keep it for a spare and as a guest bike for friends who own mostly mountain bikes (so we can do day trips). Good stuff and a lot of fun. Thanks for looking!

My wife spotted a 1980 Fuji Royale sitting on the porch of the local "Re-Store." I didn't even bother to take a 'before' pic (you know what dogs these look like after years of neglect), but it was mostly original and mostly there. I think someone had ridden it for years in a trainer, as it had earmarks of that---deeply indexed headset, swapped out corncob freewheel, and burned up rear wheel. But it was worth a chance at $50, she figured.
Anyway, had a ball re-building this as a day tripper from parts I had lying around: New housings/cable, new bar tape, SR stem/headset, nitto bars, shimano bar ends, $15 shimano 14-30 freewheel from the LBS, 36-46 biopace given to me by a local bike buddy (int the mountains here!), Eclipse rack/Cannondale bag from an old Trek I bought last year, original "Fuji" (Suntour) Vx derailleurs, and added paselas to the 27" Ukai wheels. Repacked and rebuilt everything else, including the Diacompe 610 centerpulls which work very well.
My wife and I went for a 4th of July shake down ride this AM, and fortunately there were no fireworks! Maybe my taste is just exceedingly pedestrian, but I think this is a nice bike. Handles well, rides well, accelerates well, and is comfortable. Gonna keep it for a spare and as a guest bike for friends who own mostly mountain bikes (so we can do day trips). Good stuff and a lot of fun. Thanks for looking!

#474
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Wow, a blast from the past! Be sure to post up those Red Royales when you get them on the workstand... we're a flock of voyeurs here!
#475
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[QUOTE=classicjapanese;17493834]
So is it true the 75's dropped the "Fuji Racer" DT decal? Sad because I kind of like it. Was it just a catalog picture lacking the decal? I guess it was a little on the confusing side, like it had two model names. It comes with the decal set, so being built in May I guess it could be either. If I could find the crankset for a reasonable price I would be well on my way to making it complete. Thanks for the info, much appreciated!,,,,BD
I had forgotten about this thread! I have to add my latest Fuji find! Either a late 74 or early build 75 "The Newest". The S/N says May of 1974, but has a series number of 10043. Somehow I don't believe they built 10,000+ of this model that year, so I am assuming it was the 43rd built for the 1975 year? Just thinking out loud really. Anyway, I have a few original parts on the way, with more to come. Some I already have, thank goodness. It's going to live again, it will just take a little time, money, and elbow grease.,,,,BD
Nice Newest. You have a sizable, but fully worthy, and unquestionably rewarding project ahead of you. Sometimes “we” refer to yours as the Newest 1B because it has the higher spec components, including the Gran Compe Center-pulls, the drilled out Mighty Compe Custom Sugino cranks and the all important PDL-M Suntour shifters and the V-Lux Rear Derailleur — the reverse Alloy Compe is icing on the cake. The hardest part to get, if you want to go original is the Fujita Suede saddle. Painfully hard to locate. In all Chrome this bicycles look sensational with leather wrap and the Fujta Professional saddle. The under-chrome is a masterstroke for these machines — it is all polished. As part of your frame is already stripped, I’d definitely finish off stripping the paint except for that lovely orange band — pretty stunning. But all the real deep joy resides in the ride, the early Newests are balanced to perfection, and the steel is sublime. Once you have one of these sorted and you go for your first ride, you will keep it forever. One thing, you might consider tubular tires (The Continental Sprinter Gatorskins have a similar feel to the original Soyo 90s) — its triple sublime.
Oh, yes, Serial numbers. Once you get past the “K,” the Showa Year, the Letter Month Code, and usually “1” — you have four more digits. I have compared numbers on about 25/30 Fuji Newest 1A and 1B models and it is not highly consistent. There are many 10032, or 10024, type of numbers, signifying 24 or 30 builds for that month, but these numbers sometimes taper off — and sometimes you just get a large digit, such as 18185. For the most part the pure system seemed to be a sequence beginning 100xx. Hard to say, and still researching, but there seems to be approximately 20 to 30 max builds, on average per month. A Newest shows up somewhere — CL, eBay, or here, about once per every five weeks to eight weeks. Sometimes as few as 4/5 a year, sometimes double that. They are jewels. Here’s one on Scott’s site buit to fairly high spec... If you search further there you’ll find his all chrome version. All best on the build!
1974 Fuji Newest "Blue Plate Specillisimo" - Vintage Fuji Archive
Nice Newest. You have a sizable, but fully worthy, and unquestionably rewarding project ahead of you. Sometimes “we” refer to yours as the Newest 1B because it has the higher spec components, including the Gran Compe Center-pulls, the drilled out Mighty Compe Custom Sugino cranks and the all important PDL-M Suntour shifters and the V-Lux Rear Derailleur — the reverse Alloy Compe is icing on the cake. The hardest part to get, if you want to go original is the Fujita Suede saddle. Painfully hard to locate. In all Chrome this bicycles look sensational with leather wrap and the Fujta Professional saddle. The under-chrome is a masterstroke for these machines — it is all polished. As part of your frame is already stripped, I’d definitely finish off stripping the paint except for that lovely orange band — pretty stunning. But all the real deep joy resides in the ride, the early Newests are balanced to perfection, and the steel is sublime. Once you have one of these sorted and you go for your first ride, you will keep it forever. One thing, you might consider tubular tires (The Continental Sprinter Gatorskins have a similar feel to the original Soyo 90s) — its triple sublime.
Oh, yes, Serial numbers. Once you get past the “K,” the Showa Year, the Letter Month Code, and usually “1” — you have four more digits. I have compared numbers on about 25/30 Fuji Newest 1A and 1B models and it is not highly consistent. There are many 10032, or 10024, type of numbers, signifying 24 or 30 builds for that month, but these numbers sometimes taper off — and sometimes you just get a large digit, such as 18185. For the most part the pure system seemed to be a sequence beginning 100xx. Hard to say, and still researching, but there seems to be approximately 20 to 30 max builds, on average per month. A Newest shows up somewhere — CL, eBay, or here, about once per every five weeks to eight weeks. Sometimes as few as 4/5 a year, sometimes double that. They are jewels. Here’s one on Scott’s site buit to fairly high spec... If you search further there you’ll find his all chrome version. All best on the build!
1974 Fuji Newest "Blue Plate Specillisimo" - Vintage Fuji Archive