1973 Raleigh International.
1 owner. yes, i bought it new in 1973 from the lbs where i worked in high school. The lbs owner told me he wasn't happy with me riding my Sunset Orange Schwinn Varsity with chrome fenders to work at a Raleigh Pro Shop. Kinda like driving yer toyota to a UAW plant in detroit. He made me a decent offer on the last unsold Raleigh from the 1973 order and told me "get rid of the Schwinn" which I did. I rode it on SAGBRAI, Second Annual Great Bike Ride Across Iowa and some weekend bike club rides and weekend tours for the next year before I moved on to race bikes. I rode Sagbrai with my next younger sister who rode a bright yellow Peugeot UO8 mixti. Some part changes and upgrades to the Raleigh. Clincher wheels right out of the box. The lbs owner was sure I wouldn't want or need sewups that the bike came with. He traded me the oem wheels for the parts to build my own. Campy high flange hubs, Three Star stainless spokes, Milremo branded Wienman dimpled rims in 27". I don't think 700c clinchers were available then. I replaced the bland GB bars and stem with TTT brand and again with Raleigh engraved bars & stem about 5 years ago. Ooh, and Raleigh Heron imprinted bar wrap. Brooks cambium saddle. I gave up on the narrow brooks leather saddles a few decades ago. Gearing is 52/42 and 14-16-18 -21-24 5 speed friction shift. I'm hopping the low is okay for this years "Hilliest of All Time Ragbrai". Stock brakes were Weinman center pulls. Same brakes that came on countless 10 speeds during the bike boom. The lbs shop owner gave me a set of DuraAce side pulls in 1974. I replaced those 5 years ago with Campagnolo Records to match the rest of the bike. Its now "Full Campy". I have the original Campy pedals but I moved to Shimano spds about 25 years ago. Today I added the rear rack and bag, computer, strap on wb cage (few bikes had wb bosses in 1973), pump, changed the pedals to spuds. 27 pounds dry. Took it out for about a 50 mile ride. The computer magnet kept turning on the thin spokes so it would stop registering. And the default calibration was about 5% off. I am riding this bike 50 years after its first Ragbrai on Ragbrai LI (51). 1974 - 2024. About 5 years ago I took the fresh update to the ABCE and it earned a best road bike award. Chrome fancy lugs and shiny original paint.
One item, on the smaller frame sizes, the Raleigh Carlton factory builders would cut the points off the head tube lugs so the brass Raleigh badge would fit. Raleigh sold these in 20.5, 21.5, 22.5, 23.5 and 24.5 frame size.
There is some disagreement among the experts on the serial numbers vs years on this model. I still have my receipt some where so I know when I bought it. Raleigh would change colors every couple of years so color alone won't nail it down to 1 year. The following years were a much flashier coppertone. I later had a coppertone that got stolen and my brother had an identical coppertone that he sold.
The Raleigh International and Schwinn Paramount were nearly identical bikes. Because Raleigh made their own GB bars and stem, that's what Raleigh put on the bikes. Those GB bars were pretty weak. They would sag near the stem after a few thousand miles. Schwinn didn't make aluminum bars so they use the much nicer Italian Cinelli bars & stem. The rest of the 2 models were the same: tubing, brakes, gears, etc. The Paramount was Schwinn's top model but Raleigh had the Professional which out spec'd both the Paramounts & International. BTW, 1973 was when Masi started production in the USA with a level of lug work that just blew everything else out of the water. $375 for a Paramount or International, $475 for a Pro but at $600, Masis sold as fast as they could make them. I remember one busy saturday at the shop, there were about 30 customers jammed in there trying to buy bikes and this guys walks in the door, skips the line and in a loud voice says "I'll take that bike in the window". Every one just stood there and watched this guy lay six $100 bills on the counter and walk out with the bike. Jaws hanging loose on the $150 bike customers.