So let me start with a little trip to the past...
Sorry for some c...y images, but some of them date back to 2010 or even earlier.
This was the first bike that I ever mangled with - a 1977 Romet Wagant that i got from a friend of my mother, as a rusty pile of parts. Started working on it, cause my 24" wheel romet that I got years back was stolen. This was it's final form when it was finally properly "rebuild" into a single speed, using mostly racing spare parts. It was fun to build, and I sold it to my friend for about 150$ back in 2015.
This was the second bike that I ever build, found in my aunts shed as a pile of parts. As I recall a 1976 Romet Wigry. it had a 28" wheel fork (that I have to this day
- it was kinda expensive when I was 15 or 16 back at the time), a 20x1.75 front tire, and 20x2.125 tire in the back. The lights were powered by a 6V battery taken from a computer ups, and all the lights used regular 6V bulbs. Took it apart, and the frame was given as a present.
These three bikes I got from an older guy when he was selling his house, back in i think 2010, or 2011. The upper one was a Romet BMX from the eighties (i had a red one when I was younger, many of them came with tires matching the color of the frame). Took it apart, and gave the frame, fork, stem, steering bar with handles, and front wheel to a friend who wanted to build a bigwheeler from it.
The brown and red one were from the same year (1983), and both were Romet Wigry 3 folding bikes. Took the apart, cleaned & regresed them. The brown one was given as a present to my friend from Gdańsk, and the red one was sold for something like 20$ in 2015.
This was a Romet Turing 2 as I recall from 1981. That my friend found in a junkyard. Fitted it with MTB tires, I believe a Shwinn handlebar & a front light from a Star truck. The wierd thing about it was that it had all the regular Romet stickers except the one from the seat tube wich was with the Universal (export) brand. This was kinda normal in factories where the quality of bikes they build depended on the blood alcohol concentration of the workers on the assembly line...
The story behind this one is a bit complicated. Back in 2013 me & a friend found this Bałtyk frame in an attic of an abandonned house near the Kabaty forest. The frame was probbably new, but since the house was falling apart it had seen better days. In 2015 I traded some oldschool BMX parts for a set of 26" wheels with Shimano Nexus 3 speed rear hub, and a Shimano generator front hub, both fitted with Shimano Inter M roller brakes. And since I didn't have anywhere to put them... I made this. Bałtyk brand bicycles were made as one of the first bicycles in Poland after the war. This one was the R25 ladies model, and was probably produced in the early fifties. It was taken apart as a donor to another frame, and the frame was given away as a present.
This is the frame that got the wheels & most of the parts from the previous one. It was an early seventies Romet Laura. Rode it for almos a year, and after a half a year of standing outside I found a decent frame to put something cooler out of it. The frame - like the Bałtyk wass passed down as a present, and some of the parts used in my other bikes.
This was a 1971 Romet Karat that I found last winter in my aunts basement (technically not precisely "her" basement, but the basement that she took as hers, after some of her "good negihbours" proclaimed her basement as his
). Top photo is how I found it, and lower photos are after cleaning and brining it back to life. Nice thing was that it still had all original parts, including tubes & Degum brand tires. Sold it a month ago for 100$. Good price considering the fact that it is from 1971 (the year when ZZR changed name to Romet), 100% original and in not-that-bad of a condition, and since they're very scarce nowadays.
So from the past let us jump to the present with this one:
The first photo is with a 1966 ZZR Huragan racing bike that i gave to a friend of mine, and he did a perfect restoration of it (even the tires are original GDR made Pneumant racing tires - the same as the ones that it had). The bike is a 1973 Romet Czajka - a kind of an experimental folding bicycle. - the front and rear of the frameset is the same as in the previous model Karat, but the middle and the hinge are of a new type ised later in Wigry bicycle. These are old photos, right now it hangs as a decoration in my shop, and has almost all the accessories from the period, and stuff like original warranty card, manual, wrenches, tube valve replecements etc. I'm still collecting a lot of parts to make it into a most "lux" edition with front brake & half chrome headlight.
This is the cruiser that I made from the parts of the Romet Laura. the frame is a 1969 ZZR Karlik frame originaly fitted with 24" wheels. It's still a work in progress, but I love riding it. Also it has a gear ratio that would cost a Shimano mechanic a heart attack, since the Nexus hub is designed to run with 32T in front and 20/22T on the hub and I'm runnnig it with a 46T in front, and 16T on the hub
My top speed on flat on this baby was 48,8 km/h, so really fast for a 26" wheel cruiser with saddle bags
This is the Romet Laura/Piksi that I use on postapocalyptic parties & conventions. Cause what can be more hilarious than an adoult guy dressed in a leather jacket & pants, and a cowboy hat riding a 16" wheel bike shooting people from an airsoft replica. 100% fun Still in progress since it needs new tires, a better seat & wiring to all the lights in the front (and probably adding more of them - more lights means more fun
)
This is what I built from the 1969 (or 68) ZZR Pionier frame. Fun thing - no modifications to the frame were made. 24" in the front, 20" in the back. Right now it's torn apart and awaiting rebuild. Oh and the chain... it's like 3 and half chains
This is how the 1983 Romet Wagant looked like when my friend found it in the junkyard. This was the better model than my previous one (the stickers with the DORO76 production quality (wich translates to "Good Work 1976"), and Chechoslovakian Favorit derailleur. And this particular one didn't have an easy life... The handle bar, stem, and what was left of the seat were taken from an Ukraina bike or other Soviet bicycle, and it stood outside for a very long time. This is what I made of it:
A 28" wheel (insted of the original 27") Gravel bike. It uses a lot of Romet parts - the front derailleur, crankset, steering bar, brake handles & rear reflector with mount, and also a lot of parts from my favorite "Reusable Junk" box. The fun fact is that the wheels are made using the original Romet brass nipples and original racing hubs from a Romet Jaguar racing bike.
Also as a bonus:
This is a Romet Wigry 3 bike that I made with a friend back in 2008 for him to drive around the yard in his workplace (he works in the Warsaw Subway Trainyard, so it is a bit big yard...)
This is like an almost 100% factory stok (minding the lights & tires) Romet Kasia/Piksi would look like. Fun fact is that most of the smaller ZZR & Romet bicycles for kids were made as ladies frames with convertible tanks.
This is an unkown to me 26" ZZR bicycle from 1965 converted into a single speed. Probably something that was a single speed from the factory. ZZR & later Romet made a lot of "kinda racing" bicycles for kids with 24" and 26" wheels. Most of them were single, and the better ones were 5 speed bikes.
And this is a 100% Stock Romet Czajka. My friends formed a small club for Czajka owners called Szajka Czajki.
If you want even more photos of ZZR/Romet bicycles just let me know