T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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250.1 | | MPGS::DEHAHN | | Fri Apr 03 1987 16:57 | 8 |
|
If the crank is a one-piece, sometimes called an "Ashtabula" crank,
you'll have to replace it with an equivalent Ashtabula unit. They
use an oversize bottom bracket which is not compatible with other
cottered or cotterless cranks.
CdH
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250.2 | there is a conversion kit | CSMADM::SCHWABE | | Mon Apr 06 1987 14:13 | 7 |
| If it is a one piece "ashtabula" crank there is (was) a conversion
kit to allow use of a cotterless crank set. I used to own a Schwinn
and at one time had considered this option. The name of the
manufacturer and where you can get this unit are long forgotten
however. Best bet is to ask a reputable bike shop or browse through
some of the bike mail order catalogues. Maybe writing a letter to
"Bicycling" magazine would help.
|
250.3 | try George | OBLIO::WADE | | Wed Apr 08 1987 14:38 | 4 |
| Try George Gamache in Fitchburg. He probably has one somewhere
in the store. It helps if you take the parts in.
paul
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250.4 | It Still Exists | NISYSE::VINCENT | | Tue Apr 14 1987 18:25 | 10 |
| I recently got a 3 piece conversion kit from Gamache's. All it is
is the crank axle with screw on bearing cones. It comes with cups
to fit the large bottom bracket size on a 1 piece crank, and you
should buy new bearings. Of course you would have to get the crank
arms and chainrings separately. I put mine on an old Ross frame
and the conversion worked fine. At the time George told me that
he had a few in stock, if not Schwinn makes the thing and it's still
in their catalog.
TPV
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250.5 | <Fixed Gear Potential?> | ENUF::JSMITH | | Wed Apr 15 1987 18:03 | 11 |
| Thanks for the info so far.....I was out this past weekend with
a new club and noticed one of the riders was using an old frame
with a single gear. He had a hard time getting up the big hills
and a hard time getting down also because he said that he couldn't
freewheel. Wondering why anyone would do this tweeked my curiousity
and he informed me that this technique really helps to improve your
SPINNING technique. Is anyone else familiar with this type of
conversion? It seems like a natural application for my old Schwinn.
Also, if I follow this conversion route what kind of rear axel will
I need?
Jerry
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250.6 | 48 x 19 works fine here... | MENTOR::REG | Who is Sylvester McCoy | Wed Apr 15 1987 18:22 | 24 |
| re .5 Be careful about assumptions that fixed gear riders
have problems with hills, it ain't necessarily sooooo....
There are certainly great training benefits to be had from going
around "on one", the most obvious is the spinning. Less obvious is
the fact that you are hardly ever in an "optimum" i.e. most efficient
gear for riding, so you get to do it with muscle on the up hills
and with spinning speed on the flats and down hills. The net result
is that you are getting a better work out by working through a somewhat
less efficient machine. If you ride around with other folks and
do about the same distance in the same time you'll get fitter and
stronger faster, it becomes routine to ride up a particular hill
in your 42x17 while everyone else is clanging around trying to find
a 23, you can usually lose 'em on the shifts, and it destroys their
morale too. There is something I can't describe about the fact
that you never stop peddaling, anyway the bottom line (for me) is
that its less tiring than freewheeling on the downhills and then
starting to pedal again. There's an exercise physiologist somewhere
that can explain this, I'm sure.
Reg
(Oh, I saw somewhere that 100Km on a fixed is equal in work
out value to 100Miles on a 10/12 speed, Eddie B's book, maybe ?)
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250.7 | there's a rumor about | DEBIT::FISHER | | Thu Apr 16 1987 06:31 | 5 |
| re .6 It's rumored that Reg had a fixed gear on his baby carriage
-- which was probably called a perambulator or pram.
couldn't resist,
ed
|
250.8 | I kept looking for hidden motors and wires... | KIRK::JOHNSON | The bug that ate BASEWAY | Thu Apr 16 1987 09:38 | 23 |
| A couple of days ago I was riding around Belmont at
a reasonable training pace on my road bike. After a traffic
light, I passed this guy on a fixed-gear Paramont. There was
a long flat ahead of us, followed by a good-sized hill.
At the end of the flat, I was way ahead of the guy. I assumed
that I had seen the last of him. All of the sudden, about a
hundred yards up the grade, he pedals by, without even breathing
hard. It was demoralizing.
Of course, soon afterwards, we reached the hilltop. As we looked
down the long grade ahead, he turned to me and said, "Have a
nice ride." I guess he noticed the 53-tooth chainwheel on my
bike...
Anyway, the moral of the story is: fixed gear bikes can be
GREAT on hills. When you're only pushing 17 pounds, and you're
not fretting over your shift levers, and you haven't just pumped
up the lactic acid in your thighs by trying to hit 40 on the
flat, you've gonna fly up those hills.
MATT
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250.9 | a title for your reply | MENTOR::REG | Who is Sylvester McCoy | Thu Apr 16 1987 12:52 | 5 |
| re .8 I'll wait for you at the top, if you'll wait for me
at the bottom, eh ?
Reg
|
250.10 | Use (at least) one brake for the road.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Macarooned on a Dessert Island | Thu Apr 16 1987 18:45 | 24 |
| Hmm, I'm gettin' fired up now to go put my fixed gear bike back together
- I rode it to work for several years and had a great time. You can get
single-gear freewheels for a standard hub, but it ain't the same. You
really need the fixed gear to get the benefits.
Other advantages - GREAT rain bikes. No derailleur/freewheels/shift
levers to grit up on you. Also, braking improves for the rear wheel,
since you aren't necessarily relying on slick brake blocks.
Also can be a theft deterrent - heard the story of a woman in Washington
who witnessed a kid jump on her fixed gear bike and split, she yelled at
him, and he turned to look and stopped pedalling. So it's over the
handlebars time. She walked over, took her bike back and told the kid
something like "My bike doesn't like to be stolen". (Moral - be careful
when you start learning to ride these things).
Your best bet is to get a rear track hub and build a track wheel. You
can use a standard hub and a lockring (directions hidden in an old note
in this conf). Get a track cog (they come in two pitches - if you want
to use your current cranks, get the smaller pitch) and you're gone.....
circlecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecirclecircle
ken
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250.11 | Ahh yes, the Joy of being fixed... | MENTOR::REG | Who is Sylvester McCoy | Sat Apr 18 1987 14:28 | 17 |
| re .10 Just a nit, I think you mean two widths; 3/32 and 1/8.
Unless you're confessing your age by talking about block chains,
in which case you're right, two different pitches. Oh, there is/was
a Japanese pitch that I think never caught on outside of Japan,
I think it was 10 mm, anyway you're not likely to come across it
when asking for track sprockets (err, cogs) here (U.S.).
If/when the weather clears up around here I wouldn't mind leading
a "no freewheelers allowed" ride. Its so much nicer when everyone
in the group slows down the same amount to lean the bikes over in
the turns. Freewheelers just don't understand us (^:-). All stop
at the red light together and practice track stands, back up five feet
for a chat with someone, still strapped in..., yes methinks its
time for a fix.
Reg
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250.12 | Me...Build a Wheel? | ENUF::JSMITH | | Wed Apr 22 1987 11:13 | 9 |
| Ok......I'm convinced, track bike it is. I especially like the
part about taking it to work in the rain and not having to fret
if it gets stolen if I leave it overnight. Problem: I've never
used a spoke wrench let alone built a wheel. Can I buy a complete
rear wheel or does someone out there have an old serviceable one
laying around that they would be willing to part with for a reasonable
price? Same thing goes for a new set of cranks, since I'll probably
be able to use the old style and a single sprocket right?
Jerry
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250.13 | fixed gears, con't. | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Macarooned on a Dessert Island | Wed Apr 22 1987 13:21 | 22 |
| > part about taking it to work in the rain and not having to fret
> if it gets stolen if I leave it overnight. Problem: I've never
Didn't mean to imply they couldn't get stolen, just that they a tough to ride
off with if you aren't used to a fixed gear.. use a lock!
> Can I buy a complete rear wheel ...
takes a bit of looking. One of the west coast m-o places (palo alto or
bikecology?) used to sell single rear track hubs (you had to produce a
signed note from your psychiatrist :-) ). Then anyone who can build you a wheel
can put it together. My rear is the track hub, with clincher rim, 3X pattern.
Front is the standard QR hub that came with the bike.
> Same thing goes for a new set of cranks, since I'll probably
> be able to use the old style and a single sprocket right?
I'm using the same ol' road cranks I've had since day 1. No need to get new
ones, except it's a bit weird to see a "track bike" with 2 front chainrings...
the only crucial part of the conversion is the rear wheel and cog.
ken
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250.14 | No s in Cluster, no n in Turnkey... | MENTOR::REG | Who is Sylvester McCoy | Wed Apr 22 1987 15:15 | 14 |
|
Whoa, lets not get too carried away here ! A *REAL* track hub
is gonna be (I think ?) 110mm lock nut to l.n. If you're thinking
of putting it in a "regular" road rear triangle there's a few mm
to deal with here. A more sane approach (from me ? ha) might be
to get the Normandy hub that is threaded for a clutter on one side
and a fixed on the other side. That way if you find you absolutely
can't stand it, well, you have a useable spare rear wheel. By leaving
the fixed sprocket on you can later impress people who ask about
it ( Oh yes, its from when I used to [...insert impressive story
here...] )
Reg
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250.15 | | MELODY::DEHAHN | | Wed Apr 22 1987 16:09 | 12 |
|
Reg, ya beat me to it.
You'll have to get a 120 or 126 mm rear axle and space out the locknuts
in order to use the wheel in a road frame. 10-16 mm is way too much
distance to try and force the stays into place.
Campy sells spacers in small mm increments, they're cheap and accurate.
Then you can say your bike has Campy on it 8^)
CdH
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