Thanks!Love the handlebar setup…
Thanks!Love the handlebar setup…
Riding a bike, especially an old bike, off road can be interesting, and requires some different techniques. Knowing when to lift yourself off the saddle slightly, holding the handlebars lightly and similar things can all help.
Nice! I hardly see any folding bikes here in the U.S., at least where I live. Looks good! Outside of seeing you build yours, I'm not sure I've ever heard of Romet bikes.
This is one of my three off road bikes, you can see the front end of an almost identical one with derailleur gears in the barn, and I also have a modern suspension bike in another part of the barn. I almost never jump either of these two, but they get to experience the woods and trails all around our very rural farm.
I recommend building an off-roader, just make sure that you do not mind if you bend it.
These are Romets, and they still have almost no value today in Poland as virtually every farm has one, and most farms have less than 5 hectares of land.
Unless there's a class or online tutorial for it, all those techniques sound like something I'll just have to learn by trial and error or experience.
Nice! I hardly see any folding bikes here in the U.S., at least where I live. Looks good! Outside of seeing you build yours, I'm not sure I've ever heard of Romet bikes.
I honestly don't plan to jump any of my bikes or ride them all that hard anyway, especially not this one. I don't think I could handle that sort of thing myself! As long as my bike can handle riding on dirt and gravel trails at a good cruising speed and climb the occasional hill, that's all I really need right now. I don't think the kind of riding I plan to do will bend even this frame, but just in case, I plan to add a little extra rigidity where it'll need it most. At the very least, if this frame does get damaged, at least it didn't cost me anything to get it.
That would be cool! It's worth a try!If I get a welder, and since I have another of these Romet frames in stock that someone has done a massive welding repair job on near the folding hinge, then I might weld the hinge up and add a top tube to make it stronger. That might make an interesting hack bike.
Thanks Pondo! I remember seeing that frame when you built your 24" klunker back in the 2022 RRBBO. That loop-tail Colson would make an awesome klunker for sure!The step thru is looking great! I've got a '50s vintage Colson step thru frame that I'm going to build up as a klunk/MTB kind of a thing eventually. I'd like to put a cool fork on it, still looking there. This build is getting me thinking in that direction.
I'll keep all that in mind. Admittedly, I have a few '90s/early '00s mountain bikes I've picked up for free over the past few years, but they're either Murray, Huffy or Schwinn, and nearly all of them have been cannibalized for parts.For getting started off road I'd recommend finding an 80s or 90s mountain bike for cheap. I found these advertised locally in the $30-$70 range. You could probably find something even cheaper or for trade at a swap meet.
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I even found this cool Brodie for $150 which I might go look at in a couple of weeks if it's still available
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I'd recommend sticking with a decent brand like Specialized, GT, Trek, etc. Steer clear of dept. store brands like Murray, Huffy, etc as they aren't up to actual offroad riding. Find something close to the right size for you too. A front suspension fork is ok if it's not a junker. I'd steer clear of rear suspension on a cheap bike. But, honestly, a decent garage sale $50 full rigid 90s MTB in functional condition is all you need until your riding style turns more aggressive.
The sweetheart chainring looks just right on this bike. Truss rods came out great! Bike is lookin' good!I think this is the bike to use it
Thanks Pondo!The sweetheart chainring looks just right on this bike. Truss rods came out great! Bike is lookin' good!
Yeah, I meant to do 4 tack welds on each, but the way the second one was clamped allowed me to do 6. I would've added 2 more welds to the first one, but class was already technically over, and I didn't want to keep the teacher any longer than I had.It would have been good to get some welding at the free end of one of the rods, but well done - you have created a very neat set of truss rods
With some kind of welder at home, the range of what you can achieve now will extend beyond what you can imagine.
Great job!
That is a great stash you have there!More progress from yesterday:
Since the bearing cups I used during the mockup phase weren't good enough for riding, I had to dig through my collection of bearing cups for a good set. Finding a good pair of bottom bracket cups thankfully didn't take too long, and I know automatically that they're made for this bike!
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Finding a good pair of headset bearing cups, however, proved to be more of a challenge. First off, while I had plenty of Schwinn headset bearing cups, I mostly just had the lower, shallower ones. I don't recall if other manufacturers did this, but for whatever reason, Schwinn decided that instead of making both headset cups the same, they'd make one deeper than the other. What that means is if you use the wrong cup on top, there will be a big open gap between the cup and the crown race. I couldn't find a good top cup loose, so I had to disassemble one of my other bikes (fittingly named Parts Bin Schwinn,) to get the bearing cups I needed.
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Also, I found this fork shim while looking for bearing cups. I was going to use the old beverage can shim trick I've done before, but I think I'll try this out instead, at least this time.
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Once I got all the headset and bottom bracket parts gathered, I put them in my ultrasonic cleaner and cleaned them up.
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While I had stuff in the ultrasonic cleaner, I started cleaning out the wheel hubs. I noticed some small grooves carved into the coaster brake hub, which I guess means this wheel made a lot of hard stops over the years. I don't exactly remember what I did with the last Komet Super hub I built, but I decided to sand the inside of the hub with some heavy-grit sandpaper. Not sure if made much of a difference, but hopefully it'll help the coaster brake stop better.
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I stuck the Komet Super parts in the ultrasonic cleaner next. I got most of the parts clean, but some will need one more pass to be clean enough for me. I also found all the other Komet Super parts I had cleaned before when I rebuilt my first one a couple years ago. a few have sadly started to rust a little, but most everything here is still good enough to use as-is, so I can pick out the best parts to rebuild this coaster brake.
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Good thing too, as the original axle for this hub looks worn out on one side.
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Unfortunately, the wheel hub I thought would be the easiest to work on turned into a nightmare. The cone nuts for the front axle had some nasty wear to them, which basically meant that I couldn't use them.
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None of the other wheels I had in the garage had parts with any less wear and tear, and that was if they even had the correct cone nuts.
Fortunately, I had a tote box full of wheel hub parts that I had all but forgotten about, including a bunch of front axles and cone nuts!
(Seriously, I had these parts since 2019, before I joined RRB, and I have never once used them, much less looked through them.)
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Unfortunately, none of the axles had cone nuts that were in any better shape than what I started with.
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On a side not, I really need to go through everything in that tote box and find out just what sort of coaster brakes I can build out of the parts.
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Although I had no luck finding the parts I needed yesterday, I'm still certain that I can get this bike rolling. One option is to go back to the storage building and dig through my wheel collection for potential replacements or replacement parts. The other option is to use some other wheels I have on hand, like the ones pictured below.
This wheel is the same style/manufacturer as the one I'd like to use, except it has slightly beefier spokes and an ugly welded seam where the hoop was put together.
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I also have these wheels that I pulled of another bike. They aren't the look I'm going for on this build, but if all else fails, I know I could at least use these to make the bike functional.
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I had hoped to get the klunker riding yesterday, or at least close to it, but complications with the bearing cups and especially the front axle prevented that from happening. Still, I'm getting closer to the finish line. The problem now is that the weather has cooled down drastically for today and tomorrow (current temperature is 38 degrees F,) so I'm not sure what I'll be able to do until it warms up again Thursday. I have some parts that need to be cleaned with a wire wheel, and I could go ahead and install the bottom bracket assembly and fork, but I'm not sure I want to mess with that when it's this cold out.
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