T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1100.1 | Schwinn Cruiser 5 | SSDEVO::ATKINSON | NC2693V | Tue Apr 11 1989 18:13 | 19 |
| I have such a beast! It was made by Schwinn and is
called the Cruiser 5 because of the five speed freewheel.
I bought it about 10 years ago and think the cost was a
bit over $200. The frame is the same HEAVY one that is
used in their "heavy duty" paperboy model. Tires are
2-3/8 inch knobbies. Color is fire engine red, of
course. I don't know how much it weighs, but would guess
around 50 lb.
I made a few ECOs to the original design, including
replacing the chainring with a much smaller one and
adding a thumb shift lever. I also installed puncture
proof tubes (the ones with 1/2 inch thick rubber.) The
tires have seen lots of thorns but never had a flat.
I don't know whether it is still being made or not. It's
worth looking at if you can find one.
-Wil
|
1100.2 | Too each his own. | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Apr 12 1989 07:00 | 6 |
| Yeah, boy, that's quality for ya, ya run into a Honda and the
Honda gets totalled!
Enjoy it, it's unique.
ed
|
1100.3 | OBSCURE BUT NOT FORGOTTEN | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Wed Apr 12 1989 07:41 | 11 |
| Thinking about it, $200 isn't expensive. Especially if the bike
was quality made. You can't get much that money these days. I'm
assuming the purpose of these horses is the same as summer stroll
through the woods. You don't want to induce cardiac arrest, just
relax and soak up the great outdoors.
In years gone by, (I remember riding them) they were THE thing
around (U.S.) because serious riding was a minute interest and
cycling was not something the American public wanted to sink
their money into. The fitness craze was less than an obscurity
too.
|
1100.4 | Bullet Proof Beater Bike | ICBB::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Wed Apr 12 1989 09:22 | 12 |
|
This must be where the term "Bullet Proof" originated :-)
I remember suffering on one of these as a kid growing up in
a very hilly city....not much has changed....but now it's
Freewheels or Death. I'll stick with my Old Schwinn 10 Speed
with the indented down tube. It weighs about the same as a
California Bomber but it has stem mounted shifters (castraters?)
to ease the up hill pain, and yes, it comes complete with an
official Schwinn Headlight and Generator set. What a great
beater its been this winter....I'll never part with it.
Jerry
|
1100.5 | | WFOOFF::DOBOSZ_M | | Wed Apr 12 1989 13:18 | 9 |
| Columbia currently makes one. It's over $300 (I think)...They claim that
it's manufactured using some of the original dies from the '50s. We're
talking flared fenders, white-walls, two large coil springs beneath the
saddle...
Definitely a sweet-looking bit of nostalgia...If I lived on or near a
boardwalk, that would be a fine Sunday-morning ride...
Mike
|
1100.6 | Antiques or late-model? | TASMAN::EKOKERNAK | | Wed Apr 12 1989 14:06 | 11 |
| Every time I go to a place that rents bikes, they have more of these
bikes than any other kind. I always wonder where they all came
from. Do they collect everyone's cast offs, like my department
collects VT125's?
I most recently saw these in Vermont and on Martha's Vineyard.
Veritable Sherman tanks of the biking business.
:-)
Elaine
|
1100.7 | don't look back | AKOV75::LAVIN | Oh, It's a profit deal | Thu Apr 13 1989 11:34 | 7 |
| Such an outpouring of support for such a prehistoric machine.
I bet you all drive '57 Chevy's too (or at least think about
buying one now and then)
Pee Wee Herman would be proud of you guys !
(8-)
|
1100.8 | Nostalgic? Not me! | TOOK::R_WOODBURY | why silver bullets!?!? ... | Thu Apr 13 1989 17:57 | 16 |
| The last time I rode one of those bikes I was visiting some people on a
farm in the DelMarVa penninsula (Delaware). I had just completed a tour
and was, I thought, in good shape. A 10 year old kid pulled out two of
these bikes and said "let's race". I was game and said "what the heck",
thinking I'd have no problem blowing this kid off. Well, ... it turns
out *his* bike had new tires, properly inflated to 45-50 psi and *my*
bike had maybe 10 psi in those 26x2.25's on those sturdy steel rims. To
make a long story short, I didn't win the race.
If you *must* ride one of those things, do it on level ground with the
tires *HARD* and don't race any "smart" 10 year olds.
So far as nostalgia in concerned, I don't have any fond memories of
those bikes (or the kid either).
Roger
|
1100.9 | Try THAT on your De Rosa | VENERE::JOHNSON | Truth is stranger than fiction | Thu Apr 13 1989 18:55 | 4 |
| All it takes to make somebody a believer in these behemoths is to
ride on the wet sand between the waves at sunset.
MATT
|
1100.10 | Summary | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Mon Nov 27 1989 13:50 | 66 |
|
So let me see if I can summarize what I've found:
Advantages of bicycles (regardless of #speeds) vs other modes of
transport:
* Fresh air, getting out into the environment
* Good exercise
* Neat way to talk to people
* Fun to be out on the open road, watching your spokes gleam in the
sunlight.
* Cheap, clean transportation
* An uncomplicated way of getting back to basics
* A good way to beat the urban rush hour auto traffic
Based upon these reasons, it can be seen that cruisers are as good as
or superior to your multi-speed exotic-componented computer-designed space
bikes with peculiar geometries:
* You can get fresh air on cruisers.
* You get more of a workout on cruisers than upon gearbusters.
* You are more approachable as a person than as a biker on a cruiser.
On a cruiser you wear normal clothes and are much more
sedate and normal.
* Cruisers will get you out on the open road. You can ride across
the world without a lot of spare parts on a cruiser.
* Cruisers are much cheaper than expensive bikes. You needn't be so
afraid they'll get stolen, or get wet. You don't have to
worry about using up the world's titanium or aluminum or
graphite supply on a cruiser.
* Nothing is more uncomplicated than riding a cruiser. Instead of
worrying about the proper gear, or what ratios overlap, or
fussing about your cables, you just get up and go. You can
be much more aware of the world around you, and less on
bicycling for biking's sake.
* You can beat the rush hour traffic on a cruiser. In much more
comfort and with much fewer flat tires. And though cruiser
acceleration isn't so hot, the flywheel affect keeps me
travelling easy once I'm up to speed.
What advantage does the modern high-quality multi-speed bike have over
the cruiser? Just one- you can get there faster. This means that on
my 18-speed Cannondale I can ride for 4 hours and be somewhat farther
up the road than I would be riding a cruiser that same 4 hours. It
also means that I can get a little farther up a hill on my Cannondale
without standing up on the pedals or getting off and walking.
Big deal. So I give up a couple of miles per hour in exchange for
simplicity and comfort and cheapness and dependability.
And if I were in that much of a hurry to get anywhere, I'd drive my
car. I'd say in terms of price/performance, a cruiser has your
de Rosa beat, unless you're a professional racer. And don't give
me that, because you work at DEC, and you only ride when you get a
free half hour in anyway.
Oh yeah, if you really want to impress other bikers, you can't do it
in a cruiser. On the other hand, you can be sort of minimalist
counter-culture chic, disdaining the bourgeois cycling majority in
their brightly colored (expensive!) finery. And you can disdain the
cycling magazines that pimp the latest cycling clothing, because
the clothing manufacturers advertise in them. And you can always
claim that the cycling majority of the world, the people who use
cycles as their basic mode of transport and not as a mere weekend
hobby/status symbol, like about 100,000,000,000,000 people in
China, all ride cruisers.
Dave
|
1100.12 | All power to beach cruisers | CESARE::JOHNSON | Matt Johnson, DTN 871-7473 | Mon Nov 27 1989 15:09 | 4 |
| I'll take exception with .11's taking exeception to .10. The author's
tongue was at least half in cheek, as evidenced by his own admission of
owning a Cannondale. He was just poking fun at the technology-worship
that cycling has come to be. I thought it was a nice piece of writing.
|
1100.14 | Cruisers: once and future kings | SX4GTO::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Mon Nov 27 1989 16:43 | 9 |
|
No, I can't believe I omitted the most serious advantage of the cruiser
over the racing bike: The cruiser has a kick stand, and the latter, even
if it came with a kick stand, you threw it away years ago. Thus, over
the long run, the cruiser ends up with fewer scratches from being leaned
up against fire hydrants.
Dave
|
1100.15 | retro-tech | JHAXP::VULLO | Simplify & Deliver | Tue Aug 06 1996 11:45 | 11 |
| I just re-read this string. No one has added anything to it in
almost 7 years, so I assume the noters in here are more into the
super-tech side of bicycles, not the retro-tech side.
Am I wrong? Are there any noters in here who own a Cruiser or a
Sting-Ray or a Muscle Bike or a Chopper or a Lowrider?
You don't have to be the fastest dope on the bike path
to be the coolest...
-Vin
|
1100.16 | Lotsa new retro bikes, it seems... | DECC::SULLIVAN | Jeff Sullivan | Tue Aug 06 1996 13:43 | 10 |
| When shopping for a mountain bike this year, I saw (at least in the catalogs,
sometimes in person) brand new "cruiser" bikes from Specialized, Mongoose, Gary
Fisher and others. I think it was Specilized that had a few models, including
one that had shark fins and teeth.
I see a lot of *real* (old), Schwinn and the like ,cruiser bikes for sale these
days for big bucks.
-Jeff
|
1100.17 | | QUAKKS::BURTON | Jim Burton, DTN 381-0272 | Wed Aug 07 1996 08:36 | 14 |
| RE: .15
I'm into retro bikes to some extent, but I prefer interesting European
10-speeds and English 3-speeds. If I could find an old American baloon tire
bike from the 30's or 40's, I would probably be interested in restoring it as
well. Right now, I am 1 1/2 weeks away from completing the 1968 Peugeot
restoration and hope to do a 1930's English 3-speed next. Anyone have any
leads?
For vintage American bikes, check out the WWW at:
http://www.iea.com/~pixelboy/bikes/bikes.htm
Jim
|
1100.18 | | JHAXP::VULLO | Simplify & Deliver | Wed Aug 07 1996 09:16 | 4 |
| There is a link off of that page to a site with your 30's English
3spd, did you see it?
http://users.aol.com/Menotomy
|
1100.19 | | QUAKKS::BURTON | Jim Burton, DTN 381-0272 | Wed Aug 07 1996 09:33 | 5 |
| Yes. I have already been in touch. They have some nice 60's English 3-speeds,
but they are not advertising anything older. I will try to go down there to
see what they have one day.
Jim
|
1100.20 | | JHAXP::VULLO | Simplify & Deliver | Wed Aug 07 1996 11:44 | 9 |
| >> they are not advertising anything older.
On their 'Vintage' page:
1930s "The Royal London" Men's model. Original Black paint. Blue, white and
gold pinstriping. Sturmey-Archer 3-speed with Quadrant shifter on the top tube
(Low Neutral High) see picture. Rod brakes. Triple-spring Leather 'Olympic'
saddle see picture. Original and Complete. Michelin Zig-Zag tires will need
replacing if you are going to do much riding. Some rust on rims and bottom
of fenders. 22" frame, 26" rims. $95
|