Varsity ATB

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I rebuilt several Varsitys and Contis as single speed bikes.
They actually ride much better that way. The original Schwinn wheels must be about the heaviest road wheels ever. I always use 26" aluminum rims from boxmart mountain bikes and a 36h rear coaster hub. The stock rear wheels use a hub flange size that is close enough to the coaster brake hub flanges so you can reuse the spokes. The cranks and ring are usually stock as are the seat and stem, bb, headset, seat post and clamp. Flat bars. The Varisty has that flat blade fork so you can fit a wider tire in there. The Conti tubular fork limits the tire size to about 1.6" max. Takes about 8 pounds off the bike. The stock brakes and derailleurs work pretty poorly. The final and optional step is removing the cable stops. Those like to grab flesh. One sold so fast I didn't have time to take a photo.

Here are some others I did:
20" red varsity with 26 x 1.95 tires


24" yellow varsity with 26 x 1.95 tires


20" yellow conti 26x1.95 rear, 26x1.6 front


28" black conti with 26 x 1.5" tires


Frontier with 26 x 1.75 to replace the stock 650B wheels. Have 2 more in the works.
 
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Have you tried car wax to see if that will bring out the shine?

I've made a few Schwinn diamond frame conversions over the years.

1971 Varsity:
250qmqd.jpg


1965 Continental:
168752_10150097307226737_2002242_n.jpg


1974 Racer:
552607_10151228395461737_782933531_n.jpg
 
Ok so this thread has me thinking...

A couple years ago, I stripped this old 26" Ross 10-speed and used the wheels and drivetrain to turn a derelict Schwinn Speedster into a wannabe 5-speed Collegiate.
20160621_154003.jpg


Here's what was left:
20190201_191648.jpg


The frame has been kicking around since then doing nothing. But then last week I noticed this thread in the For Sale section for a Ross Diamond Frame Cruiser. Folks made a big deal out of the fact that it was a lugged frame. I got to thinking... is that old Europa the same frame?

Turns out some of the details are very close:
20190201_191716.jpg

20190201_191749.jpg
20190201_191726.jpg
20190201_191918.jpg


For what it's worth, it appears to be a '74.
20190201_191824.jpg


You guys have me thinking about scrounging some parts for a build on this thing. I guess something I could ask off the bat is how do you get the rear 5-speed spacing to work with a coaster hub? I've seen the thing on the Sheldon Brown site about placing part of the frame on a 2x4, standing on another part and applying pressure. Is that the preferred method, or is there another trick?

thanks!
 
Ok so this thread has me thinking...

A couple years ago, I stripped this old 26" Ross 10-speed and used the wheels and drivetrain to turn a derelict Schwinn Speedster into a wannabe 5-speed Collegiate.
View attachment 89548

Here's what was left:
View attachment 89549

The frame has been kicking around since then doing nothing. But then last week I noticed this thread in the For Sale section for a Ross Diamond Frame Cruiser. Folks made a big deal out of the fact that it was a lugged frame. I got to thinking... is that old Europa the same frame?

Turns out some of the details are very close:
View attachment 89550
View attachment 89552 View attachment 89551 View attachment 89554

For what it's worth, it appears to be a '74.
View attachment 89553

You guys have me thinking about scrounging some parts for a build on this thing. I guess something I could ask off the bat is how do you get the rear 5-speed spacing to work with a coaster hub? I've seen the thing on the Sheldon Brown site about placing part of the frame on a 2x4, standing on another part and applying pressure. Is that the preferred method, or is there another trick?

thanks!
A coaster brake will be spaced at 110mm, the 5 speed at 120mm. Just add 5mm spacers on each side and you'll be fine.
I wonder what width tire that frame could take. Assuming it was originally 26 x 1 3/8, I bet you could get a 26 x 1.75 'knobby' tire in there...
 
Since the bike is black, I would mask off the decals and give the rest a light sanding. Then spray using gloss black rustoleum to give it as close to the shiny look it would have had originally, without spending a lot and doing a complete repaint.
 

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