Bike Parts Sale, a set on Flickr.
I’m clearing out some stuff from the parts stash. Contact me if you’re interested – prices include shipping. I prefer paypal or local pickup in Seattle, WA, but will ship to the lower 48.
04 Wednesday Jan 2012
Posted in Cycling
25 Friday Mar 2011
Posted in Cycling, Uncategorized
Tags
80s, commuter, Grant Peterson, Jamis, lugs, Miyata, MTB, resurrect, RidgeRunner Team, rivendell, schwalbe, steel, Stumpjumper
I saw an article in one of Grant Peterson’s Rivendell Readers last year talking about the great old steel lugged mountain bikes of the 80s. I have a ’91 Stumpjumper Pro, and a ’96 Kona AA (aluminum), and always liked the Stumpy better – it’s on my restoration project list. It just felt more right for me than the Kona, and I think it was mainly due to a combination of its steel construction, good components (SunTour XC Pro), and it being my first MTB. The Kona always felt stiff, dead, and a bit unwieldy.
I have a friend who wanted to get back into biking. He was planning on picking up a new bike and indicated he had an older mountain bike from his school days. I took a look at it, and fell in love with the bike – it was an ’80s Jamis lugged bike, and I was inspired to try to resurrect it. After he picked up some new parts for the bike, I built it up for him in a few days. It turned out to be a good commuter for him. Originally his bars were too low for his back, but we got him a “dirt drop” stem and boosted them up quite a bit. He’s nice and comfy with the high bars, and is now even eyeing changing them to the Albatross bars to get even more upright.
After enjoying this build, I decided to find a nice lugged MTB that I could resurrect for myself – I figured it would be a great winter commuter. I ended up looking at a number of Bridgestones, an ’84 Stumpy, and an ’88 Miyata. The last one really worked for me based on price, condition, and parts. It was all XT, and the frame pump mount and clean, beautiful brake-less seat stays (u-brakes) made it a no-brainer. It was very similar to my friend’s Jamis, but had a bit of extra clearance so I could easily fit Schwalbe Big Apples. Wow – comfy!
25 Friday Feb 2011
Posted in Cycling
Tags
bicycle commute, brooks, commute, knobby, schwalbe, snow, snow commute, studs, thumb shifters, tires, v-brakes
I had built a set of snow stud tires a few years ago after a particularly long spell of snow in Seattle. I hadn’t gotten a chance to use them in last year’s mild winter, and put them away. In the meantime, I got a new “old” frame that I swapped out all my MTB components on and made a new winter bike. The problem is that my new bike wouldn’t fit the snow stud tires. I ended up rebuilding the old mountain bike frame into a dedicated snow beast. I finished it earlier this year, but too late to test it in the early winter snow we had.
Well – I got my chance on Wednesday. It was forecast to be a rough commute home with 2-6″ of new snow. Needless to say, I rode the bike in, and home on dry pavement (figures), and discovered a few things I had learned a long time ago.
I hate to say it, but this bike will quickly be sold, or just become a dedicated mountain bike again. Sometimes what appears to be bitchin’ is really just lame…