I've been mildly customizing newer model beach cruisers (Electra, Nirve, etc) for about 10 years. Basically just swapping parts out to make it my own. I've never actually rebuilt an old bike from the ground up... until now.
I have a 10 year old son with Down syndrome that loves to go for bike rides with us as a family. He is still not riding a bike independently. We currently have a bike trailer he rides that I attach to my bike. He doesn't peddle or help out in any way, so his trailer had a tendency to lean. I custom fit some large training wheels and that helped the tilting issue, but still doesn't encourage him to pedal. He's a thin little guy at just under 60 lbs, so it's not that big of a deal to tote him around, but he's getting older and needs to help out a bit.
My wife mentioned getting a tandem. Well to make a long story short... she opened up a can of worms and now I'm almost done with a $1000 build I only budgeted $600 for.
I bought the frame locally. Someone may fact check me, but to my knowledge this is a 1950's Monark Daisy tandem. This is a picture of the way it looked when I bought it.
I love the lines on this bike. Very smooth and sexy compared to the counterparts of the day. The old Schwinn tandems are too hard looking and don't lend themselves to look pleasing to the eye (just my opinion). Which is a shame, because their regular bikes are all rad. Just kind of missed the mark on the tandem designs. Anyway, when I saw a pic of this frame I knew that was the bike I wanted right away.
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I have a 10 year old son with Down syndrome that loves to go for bike rides with us as a family. He is still not riding a bike independently. We currently have a bike trailer he rides that I attach to my bike. He doesn't peddle or help out in any way, so his trailer had a tendency to lean. I custom fit some large training wheels and that helped the tilting issue, but still doesn't encourage him to pedal. He's a thin little guy at just under 60 lbs, so it's not that big of a deal to tote him around, but he's getting older and needs to help out a bit.
My wife mentioned getting a tandem. Well to make a long story short... she opened up a can of worms and now I'm almost done with a $1000 build I only budgeted $600 for.
I bought the frame locally. Someone may fact check me, but to my knowledge this is a 1950's Monark Daisy tandem. This is a picture of the way it looked when I bought it.
I love the lines on this bike. Very smooth and sexy compared to the counterparts of the day. The old Schwinn tandems are too hard looking and don't lend themselves to look pleasing to the eye (just my opinion). Which is a shame, because their regular bikes are all rad. Just kind of missed the mark on the tandem designs. Anyway, when I saw a pic of this frame I knew that was the bike I wanted right away.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk