Order a made to fit cover for the boat
Went back to work after a week off


Can I see rust on the braking surface of those rims (or even worse are they those rims with a patterned breaking surface)? Because you will wear out your brake pads within the week.Zelandeth wrote:Continued the resurrection of the bike.
[] Two new tyres on. Will be sweeping up bits of the old ones for weeks I reckon...
[] New rim tape also applied and rims cleaned as best as possible. Definitely not pretty in there though...Not much I can really do though that I can think of.
[] Adjusted front and rear brakes.
[] New gear change mech.
[] New chain (had forgotten how annoyingly fiddly making/breaking chain links was).
[] New front mudguard (there's one for the back too...but nothing wrong with the one on there, so it will stay. Front one needs the supports cut down by an inch or so to make it fit the wheel properly).
[] Tape re-applied to the handlebars.
[] Cycle computer installed.
Need to go back to the shop tomorrow for a new cable for the gear change as the new one needs a slightly longer cable due to the entry being on the rear rather than the top like the old one. It's working fine and has adjusted properly, but the cable is very stretched as you can see in the photo. Also I need to get a new inner tube for the rear wheel as it let go when being pumped up. To be fair, it's already been repaired goodness knows how many times in the past - so I'm not going to begrudge it a new tube! Hopefully a test run can take place tomorrow. Shame the rear tube let go as I'd hoped to have that test this evening!
Still, starting to look slightly less knackered...Real change will be when I get the paint out though!

It's nice to see another old bike resurrected, my daily commuter is off a similar age I got through pads at a rate of knots before I changed the wheels but the problem is they are 27" wheels and you can't get good quality 27" wheels so if the rims are ok probably best to keep them. New 700 wheels fit but the brakes probably won't have the reach as 27" and 700s are subtly different diameters. I started modifying mine to take disc brakes and yes it's not straight forward, I've only half done the front so far. Disc hubs (actually all new/good hubs) are slightly wider - though the forks and frame can bend to accommodate, you need to weld on your own brackets, and then if you use a cable disc the calliper brake levers don't pull enough cable through so they need a leverage enhanceriser (-technical term)Zelandeth wrote:There is some rust on the rims, but there has been ever since I got it and it never seems to have too horrendous an appetite for brake pads. Granted, I didn't tend to use the brakes a massive amount when I used to ride it as I was in the middle of nowhere! Will just have to see how it goes on that front. If a new rear wheel has to be sourced, then so be it. Not the end of the world. Shame that a disc brake conversion isn't really a viable option without a lot of work, expense and in the case of such an old bike as this, probably fabrication of bits, as they do seem to work rather better than cantilevers. Done enough research there to figure out that it's not a road worth travelling though.
New tube in the rear tyre this evening and they're both more or less up to pressure now (I really need to get a decent pump with a pressure gauge to be honest...), fingers crossed they stay that way. Test run had to be postponed as I ran out of daylight though...maybe tomorrow.
