What do old people ride, lets see your bikes
#3376
Newbie
Giant Cypress DX...All loaded up during my recent trip down the Erie Canal.
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#3377
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 4,707
Bikes: 82 Medici, 2011 Richard Sachs, 2011 Milwaukee Road
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A few changes since my last post.
My errand running, trailer pulling, beach bike.
My commuter: 40 mi round trip.
Weekend long rider.
My errand running, trailer pulling, beach bike.
My commuter: 40 mi round trip.
Weekend long rider.
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I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs.
I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs.
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#3379
Full Member
I retired at 65 a couple of years ago and turned into a couch potato and started putting on weight.. I told myself that that was enough time off and it was time to get back on my bikes. Here are my bikes, I ride my road bikes the most.
#3380
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2022
Location: USA - Southwest PA
Posts: 3,100
Bikes: Cannondale - Gary Fisher - Giant - Litespeed - Schwinn Paramount - Schwinn (lugged steel) - Trek OCLV
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#3381
Henderson, NV
Join Date: Jan 2022
Location: Henderson/Las Vegas NV
Posts: 533
Bikes: Trek Alpha 3700, GT STS DH, Raleigh Grand Prix, Fisher Montare, Fisher CR-7, Fisher Aquila, Diamondback Sorrento, The Bike Beat Revolution, KHS XC 504R
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New ride in the stable
#3382
Full Member
Join Date: Jul 2023
Location: "Driftless" WI
Posts: 388
Bikes: 1972 Motobecane Grand Record, 2022 Kona Dew+
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Reborn - again - after 51 years!
Spent last three weeks refurbing my 1972 Motobecane Grand Record. Last time was back maybe in. 2008, then when we moved in late 2013 it sat in the basement until this June.
I bought a Kona Dew+ last April for commuting to work, some recreational activity, it got me into decent enough shape I wanted to get the MB back under me.
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#3383
Junior Member
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Menomonee Falls, Wi.
Posts: 195
Bikes: 82 Trek 613 Sport Touring, 84 Lotus Classique
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1986 Lotus Classique Re-Build
72 years old. Lost my training wheels at 6!
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#3385
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Middle Earth (aka IA)
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Bikes: A bunch of old bikes and a few new ones
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Reborn - again - after 51 years!
Spent last three weeks refurbing my 1972 Motobecane Grand Record. Last time was back maybe in. 2008, then when we moved in late 2013 it sat in the basement until this June.
I bought a Kona Dew+ last April for commuting to work, some recreational activity, it got me into decent enough shape I wanted to get the MB back under me.
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#3386
Full Member
Join Date: Jul 2023
Location: "Driftless" WI
Posts: 388
Bikes: 1972 Motobecane Grand Record, 2022 Kona Dew+
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Indeed it is! A big part of why I've bothered to hang on to it, then get it back under me after so many years!
Yes that part's stock still, everything's the same as when it left the shop back in '72. I'm not a performance rider, I'll leave the serious climbs to the stalwarts I see often. What's on that MB seems entirely adequate for my 8th decade.
This part confuses me greatly. I've been pondering switching to clinchers yet the aspects involved in finding the bits that will fit this frame w/o me having to expend a lot of money is daunting. I'm running the same Mavic rims thatt have been on this bike all these years, tubular tires patiently glued on. I did swap Weinmann 999's for the side-pulls I could never get adjusted to my liking back in the '70's, and Cinelli stem over the (I think) Pivo that was a tad too short as well as too threatening with the sharpish pointy top always in view.
Maybe we should take a discussion of how to go about such a wheel & tire mod as you've undertaken off-line, via PM? Or e-mail? Did you start with the stock Campy hubs then simply sew them into new clincher 700c rims? No change in brakes, the sizes being close enough so as to allow the pads to be properly positioned?
Maybe we should take a discussion of how to go about such a wheel & tire mod as you've undertaken off-line, via PM? Or e-mail? Did you start with the stock Campy hubs then simply sew them into new clincher 700c rims? No change in brakes, the sizes being close enough so as to allow the pads to be properly positioned?
#3387
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Middle Earth (aka IA)
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Indeed it is! A big part of why I've bothered to hang on to it, then get it back under me after so many years!
Yes that part's stock still, everything's the same as when it left the shop back in '72. I'm not a performance rider, I'll leave the serious climbs to the stalwarts I see often. What's on that MB seems entirely adequate for my 8th decade.
This part confuses me greatly. I've been pondering switching to clinchers yet the aspects involved in finding the bits that will fit this frame w/o me having to expend a lot of money is daunting. I'm running the same Mavic rims thatt have been on this bike all these years, tubular tires patiently glued on. I did swap Weinmann 999's for the side-pulls I could never get adjusted to my liking back in the '70's, and Cinelli stem over the (I think) Pivo that was a tad too short as well as too threatening with the sharpish pointy top always in view.
Maybe we should take a discussion of how to go about such a wheel & tire mod as you've undertaken off-line, via PM? Or e-mail? Did you start with the stock Campy hubs then simply sew them into new clincher 700c rims? No change in brakes, the sizes being close enough so as to allow the pads to be properly positioned?
Yes that part's stock still, everything's the same as when it left the shop back in '72. I'm not a performance rider, I'll leave the serious climbs to the stalwarts I see often. What's on that MB seems entirely adequate for my 8th decade.
This part confuses me greatly. I've been pondering switching to clinchers yet the aspects involved in finding the bits that will fit this frame w/o me having to expend a lot of money is daunting. I'm running the same Mavic rims thatt have been on this bike all these years, tubular tires patiently glued on. I did swap Weinmann 999's for the side-pulls I could never get adjusted to my liking back in the '70's, and Cinelli stem over the (I think) Pivo that was a tad too short as well as too threatening with the sharpish pointy top always in view.
Maybe we should take a discussion of how to go about such a wheel & tire mod as you've undertaken off-line, via PM? Or e-mail? Did you start with the stock Campy hubs then simply sew them into new clincher 700c rims? No change in brakes, the sizes being close enough so as to allow the pads to be properly positioned?
Perhaps the shop swapped out the wheels for tubulars? Any bike shop can build you a 120 OLD wheelset. Alternatively, you can find a donor bike with 120 OLD wheels. Those will likely be 27 inch wheels but they will work fine on your bike.
Last edited by bikemig; 07-29-23 at 07:07 AM.
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#3388
Full Member
Join Date: Jul 2023
Location: "Driftless" WI
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Bikes: 1972 Motobecane Grand Record, 2022 Kona Dew+
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Thanks for that link! Yes it's entirely possible that shop swapped the wheels, but being entirely clueless back then (to a lesser degree still!) I wouldn't have known the difference! It was Chicago after all, early '70's! A different era than the one we find ourselves facing these days
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#3389
Newbie
Join Date: Oct 2019
Location: SF Bay Area
Posts: 15
Bikes: Gunnar Sports, Mikkelsen, Paul Taylor, Soma Smoothie, Bianchi Vigorelli, Lemond Sarthe, Surly Bridge Club, Marin Muirwoods 29er, Jamis Dragon Sports, Cannondale Quick, Dahon Helios, Giant Yukon, Custom Triban RC520 with Shimano Alfine 8 Groupset
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#3391
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2022
Location: USA - Southwest PA
Posts: 3,100
Bikes: Cannondale - Gary Fisher - Giant - Litespeed - Schwinn Paramount - Schwinn (lugged steel) - Trek OCLV
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Thanks !
Cannondale KnurlCork 2.8mm gel green camo bar tape - blends in well with the surroundings
I believe the color of the bike is graphite - looks like dark gunmetal grey metallic in sun and black in limited sun
Last edited by t2p; 08-15-23 at 01:02 AM.
#3392
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Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: Los Angeles
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I swapped the bars and stem but the rest is original ‘86 Cannondale as I found it 3 weeks ago. These bikes want to go fast.
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I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs.
I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs.
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#3393
Newbie
Join Date: Mar 2022
Location: Maine
Posts: 42
Bikes: '72 Bottecchia Giro, '74 Masi Gran Criterium, '06 Masi Gran Corsa, '15 Giant FastRoad SLR, Bianchi Veloce (Totaled), Ranger Zebra, Felt 80 (Dump find-$8.00 fix)
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Bought this Bottechia Giro in 1972 and rode and raced it wicked hard when I was much younger. Then I turned it into a campground cruiser when we had kids. Flat bars, wide seat and a kid seat on the back. The right sew-up tires are amazingly durable. It hung in my basement apart for about 20 years until this past winter.
Took it for a short spin a couple of weeks ago and ended up doing 30 miles with 1100 feet of vertical. Rode like a champ except the 42-24 gear was a bit tough on the hills for an old guy.
The 2006 Masi is my main ride and the '74 Masi GC which I also bought new is pretty much a wall hanger.
Took it for a short spin a couple of weeks ago and ended up doing 30 miles with 1100 feet of vertical. Rode like a champ except the 42-24 gear was a bit tough on the hills for an old guy.
The 2006 Masi is my main ride and the '74 Masi GC which I also bought new is pretty much a wall hanger.
#3395
Seat Sniffer
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: SoCal
Posts: 5,630
Bikes: Serotta Legend Ti; 2006 Schwinn Fastback Pro and 1996 Colnago Decor Super C96; 2003 Univega Alpina 700; 2000 Schwinn Super Sport
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Bought a bike years ago to ride to work when it rained. I used it infrequently, so gave it to my son when he went off to college. He used it even less frequently, and it sat outside and corroded quite a bit.
it looked forlorn, so I decided to strip it down, rattlecan it a more attractive color (it was ***** brown), and tune it up (to the extent possible with a bike like this).
Here is the result.
The brakes are crap, the shifting iffy, and it has a giant pillow king seat. But the beach is a little more than a mile away. How good does it have to be?
it looked forlorn, so I decided to strip it down, rattlecan it a more attractive color (it was ***** brown), and tune it up (to the extent possible with a bike like this).
Here is the result.
The brakes are crap, the shifting iffy, and it has a giant pillow king seat. But the beach is a little more than a mile away. How good does it have to be?
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Proud parent of a happy inner child ...
Proud parent of a happy inner child ...
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#3396
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Join Date: Oct 2016
Location: San Mateo,Ca.
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Bought a bike years ago to ride to work when it rained. I used it infrequently, so gave it to my son when he went off to college. He used it even less frequently, and it sat outside and corroded quite a bit.
it looked forlorn, so I decided to strip it down, rattlecan it a more attractive color (it was ***** brown), and tune it up (to the extent possible with a bike like this).
Here is the result.
The brakes are crap, the shifting iffy, and it has a giant pillow king seat. But the beach is a little more than a mile away. How good does it have to be?
it looked forlorn, so I decided to strip it down, rattlecan it a more attractive color (it was ***** brown), and tune it up (to the extent possible with a bike like this).
Here is the result.
The brakes are crap, the shifting iffy, and it has a giant pillow king seat. But the beach is a little more than a mile away. How good does it have to be?
#3397
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Elevation 666m Edmonton Canada
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Made some changes to my Dutch roadster randonneur. LOL
Chaincase, lights, mirror and new DIY brake arm on the front drum hub. Someday I need to get the rear light mount recessed so it is less exposed.
I can't repaint till I get the front fender fixed and bottle inserts welded. I also want to add a plate to the front inside of the chaincase. Still kind of exposed to dust on a gravel road.
Chaincase, lights, mirror and new DIY brake arm on the front drum hub. Someday I need to get the rear light mount recessed so it is less exposed.
I can't repaint till I get the front fender fixed and bottle inserts welded. I also want to add a plate to the front inside of the chaincase. Still kind of exposed to dust on a gravel road.
Last edited by GamblerGORD53; 08-22-23 at 01:47 PM.
#3398
Seat Sniffer
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: SoCal
Posts: 5,630
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Good eye! It got ejected from the garage when my SO got her 370Z (best money I ever spent).
Since it is usually under wraps and I commuted to work by bike, it's in great condition for 20 years old. Great car!
Since it is usually under wraps and I commuted to work by bike, it's in great condition for 20 years old. Great car!
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Proud parent of a happy inner child ...
Proud parent of a happy inner child ...
#3399
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Lol thanks! I pretty much live eat and breathe Subarus, since 2003. Used to own an '04 WRX that was autocrossed and tracked. Now I just drive a modified '01 Forester. Love your bugeye!