T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1219.1 | preserve, please | SHALOT::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Sun Jun 25 1989 22:35 | 9 |
| You've pretty much said it all, Jerry. If your circumstances don't
allow you to keep a bike like this for essentially aesthetic reasons,
I'm sure there would be someone out there (some deranged high-income
bachelor) willing to pay you for it. Your description makes it sound
so neat that it seems a shame to submit it to the indignity of a
New England winter... :-)
Good luck,
-john
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1219.2 | You can't have "too many bikes." | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Jun 26 1989 07:57 | 7 |
| Ok, what size is the frame?
Actually you're probably best off converting it to a winter beater.
Oh, and what color did you say it was?
ed
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1219.3 | 531 not 501? | AKOV11::FULLER | | Mon Jun 26 1989 09:29 | 4 |
| Reynold's didn't come up with 501 tubing until the 80's to fit
a low end niche. It is probably 531.
steve
|
1219.4 | Going to get it ready for the road! | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Tue Jun 27 1989 09:32 | 17 |
| > Reynold's didn't come up with 501 tubing until the 80's to fit
> a low end niche. It is probably 531.
Your right on top of Reynolds frame material. Upon closeer
examination the box shaped numbers appear to be 531. Looking
thru the various bike catalogs for replacement and upgrade parts
has been too tough on me. I stripped off the old tape, brake levers,
rear deraileur and wheels. The bottom bracket, and head set appear
to be ok. So I'm going to either rebuild the old hubs with clincher
rims or buy the $109 special set from Colorado Cyclist. I'll save the
old parts for restoration if I ever loose riding interest in it.
Will a new Athena rear deraileur work with the New Record Shifters?
Will I be able to mount the Standard 6 rear wheel since the old
wheel was a standard 5? Just 6 mm could make a difference? Can't
wait to get it on the road now. Thanks for your comments.
Jerry
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1219.5 | YES | AKOV11::FULLER | | Tue Jun 27 1989 09:40 | 11 |
| re: 1219.4 The answers to all your questions is YES.
By putting a 6 speed hub (125 mm vs 120) you will need to spread
the stays each time you put the wheel on and off. This would
be frustrating if you are racing and need a quick wheel change,
otherwise just a little hassle.
With all of your bikes, why another set of wheels? I interchange
wheels on our bikes as road conditions, etc dictate.
steve
|
1219.6 | Windsor Professional | LAGUNA::BARTHOLOM_RI | | Thu Jul 06 1989 15:28 | 11 |
| I have a Windsor Professional that sounds alot like your LeJeunne.
Here in San Diego don't need a winter beater but have been going
through the same decisions i.e. should I refinish, should I convert
to clincher wheels etc. The frame is much more responsive than
another road bike that I have which I have no explanation for the
geometry seems to be about the same which makes me like to ride
it but I have spent some Saturday nights sewing up tires which I
don't! Can anybody out there give me a better understanding of
the Campy Neuvo Record equipment which I have on this cycle. What
is it worth i.e. how does it compare with other equipment such as
Shimano, etc.
|
1219.7 | LeJeune Update | GSFSWS::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Fri Jul 14 1989 13:29 | 29 |
| Well last week I was on vacation and needless to say, a good
portion of my time was spent on the LeJeune. I stripped all the
hardware down to the bare frame (except the f.d.) and cleaned and
polished it. The frame is *beautifull* you should see the workmanship
on the fittings and the bright red paint with the large LeJeune decals
makes it look better than most of the new non-imron stuff you see
on today's bikes. The real treat is the Canelli Stem and Bars. The
Bars are actually engraved with the logo, not stamped like todays.
They came clean as a whistle. Also the old Campy 51 tooth *steel*
crank is now spotless....I love it.....and I was able to clean up
the brake arms to show the underlying blue tint in the impression
where the name is stamped on. This bike must have been in tip-top
racing condition on the day it was hung in someone's garage and
not used since (~20 years?). The bad news is the wheels. Since the
spokes were steel they came clean with brillo but are really pitted
and even though I spent the time getting all the old glue off and
mounting a set of cheap tubulars on the original Champion rims, I'm
afraid to take it on even a short club ride. What I've decided, is
to keep these wheels as original equipment and purchase a set for
around town short crusies (As Steve aptly pointed out, I can use
these on my touring machine also). So the wheels and a set of aero
brake levers are on their way from Col. Cyclist. The areo levers are
the only break with tradition (no pun intended). If I'm going to ride
it around town, I want people to think its a sleek, sexy sports model
(similar to someone with a fetish for Porches) :-)
Thanks for all the advice....I'm really enjoying this project
This would make a great winter time topic.
Jerry
|
1219.8 | Old times... | MABPRO::M_BOOKER | Martin Booker, IBM Interconnect Mktg 226-5167 | Wed Aug 02 1989 15:11 | 13 |
| My first racing bicycle in college was a LeJuene very similar to the one you
have. Beautiful, bright red, with 'second level' Campy parts and a wonderful
Reynolds 531 DB frame.
This was the 'budget' bike to buy if one couldn't afford one of the great Italian
machines of the time (ATALA, MASI, BOTTECHIA, etc.),go up to full Peugeot,
and was a good decision for me as a first time racer.
The brakes were Universal centerpulls, a Brooks saddle, and the Campy 'Record'
changers.
Enjoy...
MAB
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1219.9 | Colorado Wheel Deal | GSFSWS::JSMITH | Support Bike Helmets for Kids | Tue Aug 08 1989 15:26 | 13 |
| The wheels from Colorado Cyclist arrived but now I have a
new problem. I like the looks and light weight so much, I'm
torn between putting the new wheels on my Cannondale and putting
the Mavic's on the LeJeune. If I could just loose 20 lbs.:-(
Jerry
BTW - The $99.00 Special was for Shimano 600 EX hubs with
DT spokes and Hard Anodized (sp?) Araya CT-19 Aero Rims, (not to
mention the expert wheel building ability of the Col. Cyclist Craftsmen)
to which I mounted a pair of Specialized Turbo R 700x25 slicks that look
like tubulars. Total cost with tubes and backing strips came to
$125.
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