My bikes all speak to me. Not like voices in my head, but in a design sense. I spend way too many hours just looking at a bike and “imagineering”. As I began putting parts together on this bike, she began to speak. In a tough but sultry voice, she said,
“I’m not junk, embrace the funk and keep it punk”. This now, is the mantra for the build. All of this is true (for the most part).
So, originally, I was thinking black primer for the frame and the fenders. But now it’s red primer, satin black and whatever shiny stuff I have. Also, these are the Rustoleums I have in the garage.
Bare handlebars. Chrome steel, old stem. No brake levers, no shifters, no cables.
Single speed, coaster brake only. The Shimano CB-e110 looks old enough and I wouldn’t have to rebuild it.
Change the crank. I love the drilled Sugino Mighty cranks from the first photo, but they look too “curated” on this bike. This Custom by SR is funkier especially with the big ring removed and it fits real close into the frame. The chain line is perfect(ish). The inner ring is replaced by a nicer slotted 40T. I think 40/18 will be good gearing on this heavy single speed.
Chrome fenders. I took them off an old Ross I found at a tag sale. I should have photographed them before. But I just dug in, bobbed the rear and started trying to make them fit. They polished up OK, too. But, the fender stays had to go. The rear is suspended by a spoke from the seatpost binder bolt. and mounted near the BB. The front is attached via a ¾” round piece of aluminum that fits in the steerer tube with a set screw. I scrunched the fenders to match the tire width.
The wheels changed, too. These are the first wheels I’ve built. Fat in back, skinny in front. The rear is the original rim polished with the CB hub and new spokes. The front hub and spokes are the original mismatched replacements that were on the bike. Disassembled, polished and re-laced onto a new, skinny rim with a 3 Leading, 3 Trailing pattern. The skinwall tires will match the off-white suede seat when I clean them.
Here’s the bike roughed out. Everything fits and the wheels are round. Next is paint.