I really like the way the fork extension is turning out. Brilliant use of the brake posts.
Thanks, I just hope that they have been welded on firmly enough...I really like the way the fork extension is turning out. Brilliant use of the brake posts.
I am quite looking forward to riding itThe front fork is way past cool, GeePig! The rest of the bike is pretty chilly too!
That is the tricky part, as we do not have a community mailbox. We do have trees and the occasional barn that people attach notes to, although our local tree has only a couple of notes on it. The tricky part is that parts like this have no value until you ask for them, then the prices rocket.I don’t know how such things work in Poland, but here I would put a notice up on the telephone pole next to our community mailbox that says, “wanted: used moped or moped parts”.
Everybody would eventually see it when they stop at the mailbox.
The brakes are going to be a set of traditional ones, as the wheel is smaller than what was originally fitted. That is what I love about messing around with parts from other bikes...This all looks like it will work just fine, and I am waiting anxiously to see how you will mount the brakes.
Thanks, it is always a pleasure to give other people ideasgreat improvising on the front forks, and the linkage system.... given me an idea with that! the way you married those rear extensions inside the old dropouts is a fantastic idea too! well done!
I am still giving myself some time to think about how I am going to do mine, and once people talk about hammering then the ideas start flowing. I suppose I could hammer a flat section in the tube right at the point I want to mount it.It’s coming along quite lovingly. It’s going to look like it’s had a little “tough love”.
One of the things I noticed when I came here is the variety of ways people have invented to mount a seat.
I like to plug the tubes over or into something attached to the bike, so that the open ends are not exposed. That of course means making more parts.
But where there’s a hammer there’s a way.
I like how you think. Artist and constructor.Well some progress has been made towards mounting the hoop that will mount the rear of the seat.
Like many things on this bike I have two different plans, and the parts for the plan that does not work out will be kept for some future project. I can mount these to the lugs on the rear of the frame, then use the large slot to mount the frame. These come from the smallest kids bicycle that have passed through my hands, and I am sure that I can use them somewhere.
The alternative is to indent the seat tubes so that they fit between the rack/mudguard mounts on the frame, then have a strip of metal to strap each one to the frame, with a bolt threaded through the tubes to stop the tubes slipping.
Or something like that.
Now I am painting the front wheel supports so that they look like a system instead of random parts bolted together. I was going to give the struts a bit of a final set of hammering to smooth them out, but since I am not filing or grinding away the corrosion marks from the lower links I have decided that subtle brutality is going to be the look I am going for.
A synergy of engineering and brutality.
Well, I have never thought much about it, but maybe I am an artist and constructorI like how you think. Artist and constructor.
PS the two dropouts looks like two fish
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Thought the same:Poland doesn’t have beer in aluminum cans? Aluminum beer cans make perfect shim stock for many things.
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