Bike Forums

Bike Forums (https://www.bikeforums.net/forum.php)
-   Classic & Vintage (https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-vintage/)
-   -   1961 Frejus (https://www.bikeforums.net/classic-vintage/927062-1961-frejus.html)

look566 rider 12-22-13 02:26 PM

Great looking, well used bike!

bloom87 12-22-13 04:09 PM

really cool bike !

rootboy 12-22-13 05:28 PM

Let's see some more pics of that beauty.

anixi 12-22-13 05:43 PM

Dude! That is one great looking saddle! Total score on a great old bike! The saddle should be carefully inspected and lubed up with some Proofide. It should last forever. I love those old thick leather saddles, they seem to have a magical quality that the newer ones can't seem to match. Congratulations!

old's'cool 12-22-13 05:49 PM

Nice touring bike, 1960s style! :love:
Very graceful fork.
Quite the narrow range triple... half-step plus, uh, half-step! (back when men were men)
Not a bad combo of period correct and newer components. :thumb:

KonAaron Snake 12-22-13 05:56 PM

Thanks for the kind words all!


Originally Posted by obrentharris (Post 16351255)
Very nice bike!
Do you suppose the dimples where the chain stays insert into the bottom bracket shell were an alternative to pinning to hold the stays in place while brazing?
Brent

That's interesting - anyone confirm?

Dawes-man 12-22-13 06:34 PM


Originally Posted by rootboy (Post 16350635)
BTW, be sure to blue locktite these on after you overhaul the fenders. They're a real b**ch to find, and not easy to make! :>



http://i1227.photobucket.com/albums/...Fendernut1.jpg

Don't nobody go asking rootboy how he knows… :D

That really is a cool feature and thanks for drawing my attention to it rootboy. I'm in the middle of fitting mudguards to my Morris (just painted the stays black gloss) and found myself wondering if the brackets could be bent out like KonAaron Snake's Frejus (beautiful, btw, KA S!) but then realised the rest of the work that would need doing, like threading the ends of the stays, finding a male & female nut junction for the end and all the time searching for it all would take and gave up. It could an interesting project though...

It does make me wonder if Frejus commissioned those fittings or whether they were generic at the time… I notice the seat lug is of a kind common on 'city bikes' in Italy at the time, although I'm not sure if they all came from the same maker or were in fashion and produced by different makers. It's a very pretty style, I think. Here are a couple of variations on the theme, snapped on the streets of Verona, Italy:

A Galetti:

[IMG]http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6099/6...0ef4cabc85.jpg IMG_6606 by Dawes-man, on Flickr[/IMG]

A Chesini:
[IMG]http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6219/6...36c7a784a3.jpg IMG_6544 by Dawes-man, on Flickr[/IMG]

ColonelJLloyd 12-22-13 06:40 PM

Great bike! Make sure you have enough of that stem in the steerer. :eek:

Dawes-man 12-22-13 06:52 PM


Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake (Post 16350668)
My fenders are damaged :(

The rear has a tear near the stay...though they seem to be solidly stable.

As rootboy suggested, it can be gently beaten into shape but then you would need to reinforce the area to keep the repair good. The neatest way I've seen to do this is to add a length of 3mm diameter alloy rod along the underside of the indents in the mudguard, bent to follow the form, either side of the damage.

This is a celluloid mudguard from a pre-war Evans but it shows you what's involved. You would need to use a strong glue.

[IMG]http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7387/1...769fda71e5.jpg Mudguard repair by Dawes-man, on Flickr[/IMG]

spacemanz 12-22-13 07:13 PM


Originally Posted by Dawes-man (Post 16351968)
It does make me wonder if Frejus commissioned those fittings or whether they were generic at the time… I notice the seat lug is of a kind common on 'city bikes' in Italy at the time, although I'm not sure if they all came from the same maker or were in fashion and produced by different makers. It's a very pretty style, I think. Here are a couple of variations on the theme, snapped on the streets of Verona, Italy:

Good eye, but Frejus were known to be distinctively plain-looking lugs, with that cut-out window. Those others are just too fancy-looking, to be "real" Frejus. ;)

Dawes-man 12-23-13 02:49 AM

Just came across this on Classic Lightweights, an early '60 Frejus that looks to my untrained eye just like yours. Could they be related? :)

mikemowbz 12-23-13 05:29 AM

Great bike, Aaron. These patina-d gems make me a little self-conscious that my own modest collection stretches back no further in history than the last Russian Olympics.

rootboy 12-23-13 07:58 AM


Originally Posted by Dawes-man (Post 16352698)
Just came across this on Classic Lightweights, an early '60 Frejus that looks to my untrained eye just like yours. Could they be related? :)

It is interesting to me that the bike shown there doesn't seem to have a Reynolds decal on it either. I wonder if this was common practice in the early 60's.
Mine ('63) has one on the seat tube, just above the main Frejus crest.

phillyrider 12-23-13 05:02 PM

Very Nice Bike...Have fun with it. With Frejus, the C&R serial number registry helps, so early 1960's looks about right. It looks like it is in good shape...

KonAaron Snake 12-23-13 05:04 PM

If you check the C/R list you'll notice that this is actually registered on it!

spacemanz 12-23-13 05:59 PM


Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake (Post 16354352)
If you check the C/R list you'll notice that this is actually registered on it!

Cool, it's like your provenance, kinda. :) My frame & fork's serial # is listed there too, but it's an unusual run of numbers, from the early 70s & possibly earlier, that don't really "fit" anywhere. When I sent pics to the webmaster there, I still had about 2/3s of the old headbadge decal, since removed, so it's listed, just not pretty enough for a centerfold shot, LOL. ;) But I don't care what she looks like, this frame is my baby. :)

toytech 12-23-13 06:47 PM

Great looking bike!
here is mine
http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c1...s/IMGP3394.jpg

old's'cool 12-24-13 02:50 PM


Originally Posted by toytech (Post 16354587)

The fork, um...?

toytech 12-24-13 03:08 PM

Is turned slightly, it has been on a frame table and fork checker and is actually straight. ;)

old's'cool 12-24-13 03:16 PM

OK, glad to hear it's just optical! :thumb:

Dawes-man 12-24-13 05:57 PM


Originally Posted by toytech (Post 16356632)
Is turned slightly, it has been on a frame table and fork checker and is actually straight. ;)

According to my camera, every one of my bikes has bent forks :thumb:

toytech 12-24-13 06:02 PM

I have a knack for making my bikes look bad in photos I think. :D

spacemanz 12-25-13 02:59 AM

8 Attachment(s)

Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake (Post 16351194)
With 27.0 tubing I think it has to be double butted. Show yours man...maybe we need a Frejus thread?

Later that same century.... ;) I got "some" decent pics here, but you probably know, sometimes pics come out better than others. That's why I take a lot, that way, I usually get at least some right. ;) I just realized, our seat tube clusters are the same, but our fork crowns are a little different, for sure. I'll try to grab a better close-up sometime, and that might be a useful identifier, for other folks, trying to date their Frejus/Freji. :) Obviously, this is after riding through old leaves, around Magnuson Park. It's like mulch, but sticks everywhere.

rootboy 12-25-13 07:06 AM


Originally Posted by toytech (Post 16356995)
I have a knack for making my bikes look bad in photos I think. :D

It's damned hard to make them look good, I think. Taking great bike shots aint easy.

Are we turning this into a Frey-yoos appreciation thread? Oh good! :>


http://i1227.photobucket.com/albums/...s/Frejus30.jpg

KonAaron Snake 12-25-13 08:12 AM

^^^ one of the most beautiful bikes on the forum...the panels are hawwwt.

Spaceman, yours looks a good bit later. I do like the bars a lot...they seem nice and high. I've never managed to get stache bars comfortable.

Maybe a show your frejus thread?


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 03:18 PM.


Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.