Jan 3, 2016

Meanwhile in my garage, therapy

To all my readers, have a healthy and good new year and stay on the road safely.

Since my health is getting better, I'm able to take a spanner and loosen a tight nut, my ambition to work in my garage grows. To start easy I took my old Raleigh racebike out of my cellar and dismantled it to find out how the state of the bike is.


When I was young, back in the seventies and eighties, the dutch racing team of Peter Post, Team Raleigh was succesful on the international tracks. I remember Joop Zoetemelk, Peter Post, Jan Raas, Hennie Kuiper, Gerrie Kneteman, Johan van der Velde, Steven Rooks, Gert-Jan Theunisse and Peter Winnen (later in Team Koga). Names engraved in my memory as the names of my parents. I remember watching the early days of Tour de France reporting on black and white TV. When my parents were able to buy a colour TV we saw the typical red, black and yellow team colours of the shirts and bikes. Their shining bikes in the French sun. and their successes kept on coming. This was the golden age of dutch cycling, at least for me.
I was around 15 years back then. By taking the papers out in my neighbourhood,  I earned about 800 guilders (would've been 800 euros by now) for a race bike. I bought it at Chrit Jaspers'. This was a renowned shop in our region for bikes and stuff. I remember how he sold me a Raleigh team jersey, partly in wool, and a short which was way too big for my tiny legs. The shop stil exists, ran by Chrit's eldest, Jannie, manne.

I always kept my Raleigh because I have so many good memories with it. I regularly went to the south of Limburg to climb the hills. Once I went for Luxemburg for a short vacation, on my bike. When I went for my studies to Nijmegen, I took my bike with me and rode several kilometres around the city to Arnhem, Millingen aan de Rijn, Kleve, even Wageningen and to and from home occasionally (Nijmegen - Herkenbosch: 100 km).

This is how my bike was stored in my famous cellar.
 Pip found it and brought it to my attention as a project again.
Now the Raleigh is dismantled, all parts are repaired, cleaned and ready for fitting on the frame. I've got a nice pair of wheels from my neighbour, who had a Gazelle in an impossible frame size. But all parts of this similar, time exact bike fit on my Raleigh. Here are some pictures of the work in progress, since the initial post was from a month ago. This is gonna look like an easy job, but I didn't photograph all steps. and for a therapy project, I had my hands full with this.

Double butted tubes! That was the hit in 1981 from Reynolds, the 531 tube. There was only one better tube, the 835 (?) tube.

My bike was the Rapide, a middle section and middel priced recreational bike in team colors.


Some dents and scratches give the old frame character. 
This is where the shifters handle sits on the angled tubed.

The fork of this one was not completely chromed, 
but the Suntour pads seemed to be special back in the eighties.

My box of spares and parts, after dismantling the neigbours Gazelle.
In the Land of Plenty it is easy choosing.

Before ...

... and after cleaning the Weinmann brakes.

The set up of the Gazelle Wheels is sufficient and even wel kept.

The Rigida rims are dull and slightly corroded. 
The spokes are chromed and are very well kept.


The crancks axle overhauled.

Here the frame is already painted. The cranck axle is due for mounting. 
I could not get is exactly adjusted. So some refining still remains.

Weinmann brake handles before...

... and after a good polish with Commandant 4 (see earlier posts on the Sportwagon)

The Japanese crancks fitted on the Gazelle are very nice time exact pieces: Super Mighty!

 This is the original Sakae handle bar. I sanded and polished it untill it shone. See below.

A rewarded price winning brand, it seems Sakae Custom

Road Champion!

The complete steering set up is polished.

The frame of the bike had become scratched and dirty over the years (I bought it in '81). Cleaning, light polishing and cleaning again gave a 'rat look' frame which I painted with clear varnish. 

The original parts were dismantled, cleaned and assemled again. This is a Suntour VX rear shifter or derailleur. This one sat on my neighbour's bike, since mine was slightly bended by a crash in 1984.

I never liked the original cranck, my neighbor had the right type I wanted. but again the chain wheels of my Raleigh were nicer. Luckely they were worn, so I had no chice mounting these ones. The size is bigger, mine had asetup of 52, 46. These are 54, 48. Alas the crancks don't fit realy good on the axle. So I have to look foor an other cranckset. vintage sets are expensive as hell, so I have to go to Jannie Jaspers, manne. Maybe he has some old stuff in his cellar?

The Weinmann brakes are simple though very efficient. 
I descended the Col des Aravis with this set. 
I'll look up the photo I took up there for a next post.

I love these brake handles. By polishing they look even better, but I don't bother them being scratched. That looks rather cool. The mounting of this type is with a srew on a fixed spot on the handle bar. 






4 comments:

BMWRoellie said...

Ha Thei,

Aangezien je die fiets zo mooi hebt opgeknapt lijkt dit me een mooie kans om hem te showen! :-)

http://www.1limburg.nl/historische-wielerkoers-leroica-komt-naar-zuid-limburg?context=section-2


groeten, Roel

Thei Moors said...

Haha Roelie,
Ja, dat zou mooi zijn. Helaas is mijn fietsje nog een ypungtimer en voel ik mij zelf een hele oude oldtimer. Chronologisch zit dat niet lekker. Maar bedankt voor de tip.
Hoe is het verder aan de Stasie?
Groet, Thei

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