Old Paramount frame work
#1
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Old Paramount frame work
Got this frame that had a broken seat-tube right where it goes into the BB. Took it apart, took out the seat-tube fragment that was brazed into the BB, then cleaned up and shaped the bottom of the seat-tube, shortened the head tube to match what was lost off the seat tube, then welded and brazed it all back together. Next will cut the fork's steer tube down to match and chase it's threads down the distance of what that will lose, and then can try building it back up and taking it for a ride.....
Abara....

cadabara.....
Abara....

cadabara.....

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#2
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I have never seen this approach to fixing a broken seat tube before. Andy
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AndrewRStewart
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#3
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It just worked for me because it was an extra-tall 26" frame, so taking about 5/8" out of it actually made it close to the 25" frames I usually ride anyway. The seat-stays just needed to be very slightly bent forward to line back up with the seat tube lug, and I did not even trim them shorter as they did not stick up enough to cause any problems.
#4
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Shortened the fork today to match, it worked well. Cut it in the middle above the serial number to preserve that feature.





#5
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Pardon my language but that fork mod seems like doing dental work by going through the anus. Why not just cut more threads into the steer tube and cut off the extra?
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#6
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It is the method that fit the tools and skills I possess so it took very little time and I did not have to spend time looking around for steer-tube cutting tools to borrow, and I did not have to spend any money buying a tool I may never use again. That clear things up for you ???
#7
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After doing the frame and fork I threw a bunch of parts on the bike from the junk-box, and this morning took it for a ride of about 25miles, including up and down some steeper grades. As it is the bike is a single-speed stuck in 52/18 gearing, but that is okay because I am very used to riding a single-speed bike with similar gearing. So that was the acid-test for the brazing etc. stomping it up hills with 200+ pounds on the pedals in a high gear. So two days of spare time it went from trash to treasure. Stopped at a local Starbucks on the way home and snapped this shot of it's 50th birthday ride;

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#8
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There are some tricks to improve your chances, and I won't say I'll never do it (I've done two so far this year), but you have to weigh the risk into your cost/benefit analysis.
OP's shortening method relies on the skill and care you put into welding it, but it's been done many times by lots of welders and I've never actually heard of one breaking later. Maybe it's me who needs to "get out more"? Anyone here ever heard of a spliced steerer failing in use?
From my limited data, it seems like splicing is safer than rethreading.
Mark B
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I might suggest dulling down the seat stay caps. Two little knives pointing toward one's jewels...
I've only done something like this once. One of my early frames suffered a crack right below the seat lug on the sides of the seat tube. (Too many heating cycles at too high a temp will do that) before the frame was painted. As it had a rather short top tube for the tall size it was I cut off the top tube and removed the seat stays. A new top tube located a few cms below the first one and the stays were shortened at the bottom ends. Painted and sold it off after sitting around the shop for a couple of years. I forget how I dealt with the fork, likely replaced the steerer with a shorter one. Andy
I've only done something like this once. One of my early frames suffered a crack right below the seat lug on the sides of the seat tube. (Too many heating cycles at too high a temp will do that) before the frame was painted. As it had a rather short top tube for the tall size it was I cut off the top tube and removed the seat stays. A new top tube located a few cms below the first one and the stays were shortened at the bottom ends. Painted and sold it off after sitting around the shop for a couple of years. I forget how I dealt with the fork, likely replaced the steerer with a shorter one. Andy
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AndrewRStewart
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#10
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Today in a bucket of parts in my garage I did find a clamp-on Shimano cable guide and got my rear derailleur going, also a friend of mine gave me a Paramount head-badge he had in his stash. The badge is off a lot newer bike I am sure, but it is good enough. I drilled new holes for the badge with a tiny drill and then hit them with a 4-40 tap because it matched the screws I found in a parts bin in the basement.
I went to school for "tool and die" forty-some years ago before the digital age, we were taught to do things like they must have been taught at the dawn of the tool&die industry. Among many other things we were taught to turn a tap or die only the number of degrees it took to curl up a good chip of metal, often far less than ninety degrees, then turn it back and break the chip before turning it that far again past the last point. And of course there are specialty lubes for tapping and threading, the brand "Sulphlo" comes to mind. I talked to two old cycle shops in my area, one had sold their tools for threading steer tubes, the other had them but said they did not have good luck with them, and Park wants about $250 for the tool. If I had the tool I am sure I could have competently used it, but then too you have to cut the keyway that the tab-washer uses, which could be done by hand with what I believe is called a Cape Chisel, or with a perhaps a pillar file. Soon all of the old bike shops with tools for the old steel bicycles and the persons who know how to use them will be gone along with all of us who rode the bikes when they were current. I am not a bicycle mechanic, just an old jack-of-all-trades. To me all mechanical work is the same no matter if it is done on a wrist-watch or a backhoe.
I went to school for "tool and die" forty-some years ago before the digital age, we were taught to do things like they must have been taught at the dawn of the tool&die industry. Among many other things we were taught to turn a tap or die only the number of degrees it took to curl up a good chip of metal, often far less than ninety degrees, then turn it back and break the chip before turning it that far again past the last point. And of course there are specialty lubes for tapping and threading, the brand "Sulphlo" comes to mind. I talked to two old cycle shops in my area, one had sold their tools for threading steer tubes, the other had them but said they did not have good luck with them, and Park wants about $250 for the tool. If I had the tool I am sure I could have competently used it, but then too you have to cut the keyway that the tab-washer uses, which could be done by hand with what I believe is called a Cape Chisel, or with a perhaps a pillar file. Soon all of the old bike shops with tools for the old steel bicycles and the persons who know how to use them will be gone along with all of us who rode the bikes when they were current. I am not a bicycle mechanic, just an old jack-of-all-trades. To me all mechanical work is the same no matter if it is done on a wrist-watch or a backhoe.

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#11
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I went to school for "tool and die" forty-some years ago before the digital age, we were taught to do things like they must have been taught at the dawn of the tool&die industry. Among many other things we were taught to turn a tap or die only the number of degrees it took to curl up a good chip of metal, often far less than ninety degrees, then turn it back and break the chip before turning it that far again past the last point. And of course there are specialty lubes for tapping and threading, the brand "Sulphlo" comes to mind.
then too you have to cut the keyway that the tab-washer uses, which could be done by hand with what I believe is called a Cape Chisel, or with a perhaps a pillar file.
I have never had a headset loosen up when tightened with two wrenches and no groove, no tongue-washer. YMMV but I prefer forks without the groove, personally.
Mark B
#12
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Nowadays I'd do it on the milling machine but I have done a lot of them with a warding file, which seems fairly ideal for the job. Makes a nice groove.
I have never had a headset loosen up when tightened with two wrenches and no groove, no tongue-washer. YMMV but I prefer forks without the groove, personally.Mark B
I have never had a headset loosen up when tightened with two wrenches and no groove, no tongue-washer. YMMV but I prefer forks without the groove, personally.Mark B
So I am not a "framebuilder" and not interested in being one, I just thought this was the appropriate section of the forum to post this in.
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I am with Andrew, I think I would now go back and try to nip a bit off the seatstay ends so they are a bit more flush with the joint. If careful, you may be able to taper them in place and braze on a thin plate to close them off - or cut them much lower and braze in some plug-style stay caps. Bravo for taking this on in a way that preserves as much of the original as possible.
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#14
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I am with Andrew, I think I would now go back and try to nip a bit off the seatstay ends so they are a bit more flush with the joint. If careful, you may be able to taper them in place and braze on a thin plate to close them off - or cut them much lower and braze in some plug-style stay caps. Bravo for taking this on in a way that preserves as much of the original as possible.
#15
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Now I have about 500 miles on this bike. Over past weeks have added Campy Record Hubs, shifters and cable-guide, Vittoria tires and a new BB bearing because of a disintegrated cage. Bike handles and rides like a champ at any speed in any maneuver. Also sent it's number in to be added to a registry of Paramount bicycles.

Last edited by 88ss; 11-09-23 at 08:58 PM.
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It is the method that fit the tools and skills I possess so it took very little time and I did not have to spend time looking around for steer-tube cutting tools to borrow, and I did not have to spend any money buying a tool I may never use again. That clear things up for you ???
#17
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Everything I do gives me peace of mind, same with anyone else. I used gas-shielded MIG on whatever needed welding, bronze rod on the joints that needed brazed, rod I got to do repairs on a motorcycle frame that was Reynolds tubing also.
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