Last April, I was at a bicycle swap meet in Haysville, Kansas. While there, I learned they had a "free pile" where anyone could dump the stuff they didn't want or need for someone else to take home, assuming it didn't go the the scrap yard after the swap meet ended. Needless to say, once I found that free pile, I was all over it like a buzzard on roadkill! Everything pictured below, I got out of that pile. Well, everything except for the BMX bike; someone just gave me that.
While I got most of the frames I pulled from that pile for their tubing bends, I couldn't help but admire the original blue and white paint on this old 26" girl's Schwinn (pictured bottom right.)
I originally had no plans to build it at all, but during a recent "Mockup Mash," I decided to play around with it and see if I could turn it into something I liked. After trying a few different parts and ideas, I came up with this rough mockup.
While it didn't look the part at the moment, I thought it might make a decent entry-level klunker, with some refinement. Imagine my surprise when just a few days later I saw a girls' Schwinn klunker in a documentary on klunkers back in the '70s!
(Timestamps for both photos are 3:03 and 6:41.)
After seeing proof that even girls' Schwinns were being used as klunkers, I figured it only made sense to take this old step-thru Schwinn and build it up for some off-road riding. Now, I'm no hardcore off-roader; in fact, I have next to no experience riding off-road at all. But I'm ready to dip my toes into the shallow end of the pool that is off-road cycling, and I figure this old Schwinn is all I really need to help me get used to riding on loose and uneven terrain. I'm not racing this bike downhill or jumping it or whatever; I just plan to casually ride it on fairly-level dirt and gravel trails around town. Once I get comfortable riding on loose, rough terrain with a single-speed cruiser, then I can start getting into the more advanced stuff.
While I got most of the frames I pulled from that pile for their tubing bends, I couldn't help but admire the original blue and white paint on this old 26" girl's Schwinn (pictured bottom right.)
I originally had no plans to build it at all, but during a recent "Mockup Mash," I decided to play around with it and see if I could turn it into something I liked. After trying a few different parts and ideas, I came up with this rough mockup.
While it didn't look the part at the moment, I thought it might make a decent entry-level klunker, with some refinement. Imagine my surprise when just a few days later I saw a girls' Schwinn klunker in a documentary on klunkers back in the '70s!
(Timestamps for both photos are 3:03 and 6:41.)
After seeing proof that even girls' Schwinns were being used as klunkers, I figured it only made sense to take this old step-thru Schwinn and build it up for some off-road riding. Now, I'm no hardcore off-roader; in fact, I have next to no experience riding off-road at all. But I'm ready to dip my toes into the shallow end of the pool that is off-road cycling, and I figure this old Schwinn is all I really need to help me get used to riding on loose and uneven terrain. I'm not racing this bike downhill or jumping it or whatever; I just plan to casually ride it on fairly-level dirt and gravel trails around town. Once I get comfortable riding on loose, rough terrain with a single-speed cruiser, then I can start getting into the more advanced stuff.
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