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Topic ClosedWhat would your ideal race bike be like?

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LeeW View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 May 2005 at 7:10pm
I know geroff bird was advertising race bikes which he was going to make a year or two ago, dont know if he ever did get any orders.  It has going to include a GRP front fairing and fabric bodysock
Current fleet: Milan SL MK2 #027, Fujin SL II, Beany!

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alexjrice View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 May 2005 at 10:27pm
But then that would fall into 'open' and have to compete against the streamliners surely?
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Pete Cox View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 May 2005 at 8:52am

Hiya

I've got plans for my Wyre you're welcome to. T45 Steel and fairly easy to jig. It seems to go OK. The weaknesses we've shown up are due to the muppet employed to stick it together deciding that he could improve on the plans (changes made without understanding why the details weerre done like that inthe first place!!!) and then overcooking the tubes something horrible!



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alexjrice View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 May 2005 at 6:26pm
That would be handy as a reference, at the moment the biggest puzzler is actually the dropouts at the back, so I'd be interested to see how you tackled it. Have people had any success using road bike dropouts despite the fairly drastic differences in construction? I might have to invest in a milling machine as the milling slide on the lathe is a bit of a pain to use for repeated operations.

It might be good to build a copy of a known good machine before I try designing my own - at least that way I'll have a good base for any future modifications and a proper lowracer to play with so I can get a feel for what they're like.

Do you have them electronically, or are they paper only?
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gNick View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 May 2005 at 7:30pm
If you are planning planar dropouts, far and away the cheapest and easiest way to get them (assuming you don't use commercial ones) is to get them laser cut for steel and titanium and waterjet cut for aluminium (liquid aluminium is shiny and has a tendency to reflect the laser back into itself).
For reference I had some dropouts done for the new Fish forks lasercut out of 6mm steel plate with a 90deg fold and the the cutting out and folding for 5 sets each of left and right came to about £80. Without the bend they would have been a lot cheaper. I've also had quotes for sprockets which are about £2 each for 5 off.
If you supply them with an electronic version of a CAD drawing (usually as a DXF file) they copy directly from the drawing so the programming time is minimal.
Also if you want fancy material it is nearly always cheaper to source the material yourself - the cutters will otherwise charge you for the handling of the surplus material.


gNick



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gNick View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 09 May 2005 at 7:33pm
Originally posted by alexjrice alexjrice wrote:


It might be good to build a copy of a known good machine before I try designing my own - at least that way I'll have a good base for any future modifications and a proper lowracer to play with so I can get a feel for what they're like.

Suggest coming along to a race where you can get a chance to try, measure, skin your knees etc..
If you want to try the Fish chassis give me a bell - it handles pretty well and will certainly give you a feel for riding low down on a bike!
gNick



"I'm afraid it's definite, Mrs Banker - your son has bicycles"
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alexjrice View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 May 2005 at 2:51am
But fish  has 'funny pedals' . I'll come to a race as soon as I have a gap in my calendar, which will be darley moor in june.

It's not so much the manufacture of the dropouts but the design and how to join them onto the rest of the bike such that they re not likely to drop off at inopertune moments - it seems necessary to ovalise the tubing fairly drasticaly to make a round tube fit neatly onto a flat dropout, perhaps having a bend in the dropouts and butt jointing it is the way to go. I'm sure i can come up with something.
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gNick View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 May 2005 at 10:24am
Do you want a lift to DM?
The Fish is migrating over to a standard if rather short crankset - when I make the cranks...
Joining to the tube is the easy bit - doing it so you don't cause the tube to fail is more interesting. Mind people have been joining dropouts to tubes for the best part of a century and it isn't a major failure point. Go look at stick bikes.
The forks on the new fish are made from plate with a 90deg bend at the top. A hole is drilled through this and the fork blade is brazed in here. This gives the chance to have different offsets on either side of the fork without splaying the forklegs which would then interfere with the rider's legs.
gNick



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Pete Cox View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 May 2005 at 8:34am

Checkout the dropouts available from framebuilding.com. I used a set of flexible angle mounts with a tightly triangulated rear end and Columbus tubing stays. All fitted very neatly.

Alex - The plans are paper only, but you're welcome to use them.

If you send me an emai;l address (private post) I can send pics of the bike as well.



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alexjrice View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 May 2005 at 1:12pm
Aahhaa, I'd wondered about the variable angle jobbies but couldn't quite figure out how they worked, no doubt all shall become clear once I have perused The Plans. You should have a PM.

Nick, I've just realised that as is so often the case I'd like to be in two geographically different places at the same time. Next week for example I shall actually be in various exams, in fact I should much rather be in a cave in prehistoric Islington. In this particlaur instance I'd like to be a at Darley Moor, but at the same time I'd like to be at the York Cycle Show. The logistics of this are somewhat complicated so I'll have to get back to you.
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