Maxants33
Active Member
- Location
- Manchester
Hello,
I was wondering if anybody could advise me regarding the future of my main commuting bike. I'm not sure whether to follow my head or my heart on this one.
The bike is a beautiful 3 speed Vindec Atlantic with Sturmey Archer hub (approx 1970s). I've progressively restored it, replaced all the cables, break pads, seat, using marathon plus, tough new crank. Its a great bike and the thing I love about it is that while its a roadster, it can take a ton of shopping or camping equipment on the front and back pannier racks.
The main issue is surface rust. I've been quoted £280 for a respray and new decals at my local bike restoration shop in Bury (Manchester), and I really want to bring the aesthetic aspect of the bike up, so I would be willing to pay this.
However, some of my friends think that since this my main commuter and leisure bike, its just not worth chucking all this money at a vintage bike unless I make it a special occasion/collectors bike. But I just want a durable utility bike that looks great.
So I have two options it seems:
1) Rather than respray my Vindec, I could spend the £280 on modern vintage looking bike? However, I've struggled to find any modern bikes for that price that have a vintage look with the same relaxed geometry. I got really excited by the trek belleville, but that's not available in europe. Can anyone recommend a reasonably cheap and attractive commuter bike with vintage appeal? I cannot go more that £400 really.
2) Or, I could ignore my more experienced (but non vintage riding) friends and get the respray. Does anyone have experience of using a restored vintage bike for long UK commutes? I've been told that your going to be doing a lot of repairs over the years if you chose this path, since as we all know, the average UK bike commute is tantamount to a small scale mountain bike trail with the quality of infrastructure we have here. But at least that way I get to used my beloved Vindec! I'm also a big fan of internal gear hubs, it makes such a difference to me at the traffic lights, so this way I also get to keep the Sturmy archer.
SO in summary, can anyone advise on what might be the best route to commuting happiness here?
This is a very old photo (camera is currently bust) of the bike shortly after I got it on Gumtree, It looks much more loved now (except the lack of paint job).
Many thanks for reading!!!
Max
I was wondering if anybody could advise me regarding the future of my main commuting bike. I'm not sure whether to follow my head or my heart on this one.
The bike is a beautiful 3 speed Vindec Atlantic with Sturmey Archer hub (approx 1970s). I've progressively restored it, replaced all the cables, break pads, seat, using marathon plus, tough new crank. Its a great bike and the thing I love about it is that while its a roadster, it can take a ton of shopping or camping equipment on the front and back pannier racks.
The main issue is surface rust. I've been quoted £280 for a respray and new decals at my local bike restoration shop in Bury (Manchester), and I really want to bring the aesthetic aspect of the bike up, so I would be willing to pay this.
However, some of my friends think that since this my main commuter and leisure bike, its just not worth chucking all this money at a vintage bike unless I make it a special occasion/collectors bike. But I just want a durable utility bike that looks great.
So I have two options it seems:
1) Rather than respray my Vindec, I could spend the £280 on modern vintage looking bike? However, I've struggled to find any modern bikes for that price that have a vintage look with the same relaxed geometry. I got really excited by the trek belleville, but that's not available in europe. Can anyone recommend a reasonably cheap and attractive commuter bike with vintage appeal? I cannot go more that £400 really.
2) Or, I could ignore my more experienced (but non vintage riding) friends and get the respray. Does anyone have experience of using a restored vintage bike for long UK commutes? I've been told that your going to be doing a lot of repairs over the years if you chose this path, since as we all know, the average UK bike commute is tantamount to a small scale mountain bike trail with the quality of infrastructure we have here. But at least that way I get to used my beloved Vindec! I'm also a big fan of internal gear hubs, it makes such a difference to me at the traffic lights, so this way I also get to keep the Sturmy archer.
SO in summary, can anyone advise on what might be the best route to commuting happiness here?
This is a very old photo (camera is currently bust) of the bike shortly after I got it on Gumtree, It looks much more loved now (except the lack of paint job).

Many thanks for reading!!!
Max