Frame Restoration

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EltonFrog

Legendary Member
Just looked at a new Mercian Pro lugless frame in 725 tubing and it's £1200. Crikey!

S’nice though innit?
 

Fab Foodie

hanging-on in quiet desperation ...
Location
Kirton, Devon.
Indeed, I did build a modern old bike...with large flange hubs etc. But wan’t too fussed about lugs.

A proper fitting custom do-what-you-want bike is a wonderful thing.

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Drago

Legendary Member
With some canny moves it may be possible to do a dedent resto with not much dollar. A fine quality podercoat, dressed up with repro decals might not be an exact replica, but to the casual eye will look period, keep in fitting with the character of the bike, be hard wearing and very cost effective.
 

carpenter

Über Member
Location
suffolk
I bought a Carpenter frame about a year ago (£75 on eBay). It had been hand painted, but the lugs looked good and it is a classic British hand built frame.

Madgetts of Diss arranged for it to be stripped and painted with lug lining included by Bob Jackson of Leeds, Decals supplied by H Lloyd were also fitted (total cost about £150).
I haven't managed to keep it "period correct", although I did manage to buy some Birmalux rims with Sunshine hubs for about £10 which cleaned up beautifully and I think complement the frame well.
There has been the satisfaction of putting together a vintage bike and the pride in keeping a frame from about 1956 on the road, total cost around £350 which to my mind has been money well spent.

It has been my bike of choice this summer although I will have to ride my (powder coated) Falcon as the weather gets wetter as I couldn't bring myself to fit mudguards on the Carpenter.

My advice would be try a few bikes to find out which frame size you generally feel ok with, spend a bit of time trawling through eBay then enjoy the whole restoration process ^_^
 
Go on....you know you want to :okay:
 

rogerzilla

Legendary Member
I've had loads done over the years, usually at Argos in Bristol. Minimum cost with decals will be about £200 but this is a lot cheaper than a new steel frame of the same quality!
 

EltonFrog

Legendary Member
Ive restored several old Schwinns...beach bikes mostly. And a few Vespa scooters. I presently own exactly NONE of them. For me the joy in those was in the creation...the process of resurrecting something from disrepair, into a new renwed glory. Not in the long-term ownership, or ridership of them.

That said...the thought of having a Raleigh Twenty has been bouncing around in my mind.

You don’t want a Raleigh Twenty, you need the far superior, better built, smoother riding, classier looking, cooler drooler Dawes Kingpin.
 

rogerzilla

Legendary Member
The US ones have BMX sized wheels and rather ineffective 100mm drop brakes. My Twenty also has BMX wheels (451 size is pretty dead) but a rear Duomatic hub with coaster brake and a BMX fork with V-brake, so it stops.
 

woodbutcher

Veteran
Location
S W France
I've been looking for a classic road bike, but I guess my expectations are too high. I'm wanting to find something near perfect, but obviously that is a one in a million shot. Maybe this is a silly question, but can a frame be painted and set up with original decals etc to look like the original, or close to it? I don't mind going from there with component addition myself.
I would definitely have a go ! Patience is the key especially if you repaint the frame . If you are wanting quality vintage components you will spend a lot of time searching and a lot of money when you find them. The photos attached are what l did with a frame and forks l got from Italy .
I would say that the build cost at least double what an existing bike would have cost. The plus side is that l ended up with something l love riding and that l really enjoyed the process of building. Best of luck :smile:
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Rockn Robin

Rockn Robin

Senior Member
Location
Arizona
I would definitely have a go ! Patience is the key especially if you repaint the frame . If you are wanting quality vintage components you will spend a lot of time searching and a lot of money when you find them. The photos attached are what l did with a frame and forks l got from Italy .
I would say that the build cost at least double what an existing bike would have cost. The plus side is that l ended up with something l love riding and that l really enjoyed the process of building. Best of luck :smile:
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Wow!!! That is absolutely gorgeous. New bikes don't even come close to how great that looks. My opinion, of course. Maybe it did cost more to a comparable new bike, but that has your signature on it, so to speak, and when you ride it, you ride it with pride. Can't put a price on that.
 
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