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Date: 03 Aug 2007 08:38:21
From: Rick
Subject: Hetchins Spyder track bike (1972)
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eBay: http://easyurl.net/Hetchins_Spyder
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Date: 08 Aug 2007 14:35:05
From: Rick
Subject: Re: Hetchins Spyder track bike (1972)
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In article <03e4fac7425b9c5e0ef100387e0ce88d@pseudo.borked.net > Rick <Use-Author-Supplied-Address-Header@[127.1] > wrote: > > eBay: http://easyurl.net/Hetchins_Spyder Winning bid $1,251
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Date: 03 Aug 2007 11:22:53
From: David L. Johnson
Subject: Re: Hetchins Spyder track bike (1972)
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Rick wrote: > eBay: http://easyurl.net/Hetchins_Spyder Odd. It's a pretty bike, but there are some things about this description that strike me as odd. For one, wooden rims in 1972? I was racing in 1972, and I certainly never saw anyone with wooden rims. As close to it we had were the Scheeren (sp?) Weltmeister rims with balsa wood to hold the rim's shape at the spoke holes. On the other hand, bladed spokes were also not around in '72. So these wheels seem to be a mix of eras. The one-bolt seatpost was also later, and I don't think it was a track part. The pedals are at least within the timeframe (barely), but are road pedals. For a bike that was "ridden once at the World Championships", why would the fork be drilled for a brake? -- David L. Johnson It is probable that television drama of high caliber and produced by first-rate artists will materially raise the level of dramatic taste in the nation. -- David Sarnoff, 1939
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Date: 03 Aug 2007 12:26:43
From: David Kerber
Subject: Re: Hetchins Spyder track bike (1972)
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In article <2_idnQ3VH5661S7bnZ2dnUVZ_uWlnZ2d@ptd.net >, david.johnson@lehigh.edu says... > Rick wrote: > > eBay: http://easyurl.net/Hetchins_Spyder > > Odd. It's a pretty bike, but there are some things about this > description that strike me as odd. For one, wooden rims in 1972? I was > racing in 1972, and I certainly never saw anyone with wooden rims. As Maybe a track-only thing? I have no idea; I was 12 at that time. > close to it we had were the Scheeren (sp?) Weltmeister rims with balsa > wood to hold the rim's shape at the spoke holes. > > On the other hand, bladed spokes were also not around in '72. So these > wheels seem to be a mix of eras. > > The one-bolt seatpost was also later, and I don't think it was a track That seatpost and saddle clamp look very similar to the one on my bike from around that time, unless you're saying that *Campy* didn't have one like that. > part. The pedals are at least within the timeframe (barely), but are > road pedals. > > For a bike that was "ridden once at the World Championships", why would > the fork be drilled for a brake? I took that "ridden once..." phrase to be referring to the rims, and not the rest of the bike. -- Remove the ns_ from if replying by e-mail (but keep posts in the newsgroups if possible).
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Date: 03 Aug 2007 21:24:09
From: David L. Johnson
Subject: Re: Hetchins Spyder track bike (1972)
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David Kerber wrote: > In article <2_idnQ3VH5661S7bnZ2dnUVZ_uWlnZ2d@ptd.net>, > david.johnson@lehigh.edu says... >> Rick wrote: >>> eBay: http://easyurl.net/Hetchins_Spyder >> Odd. It's a pretty bike, but there are some things about this >> description that strike me as odd. For one, wooden rims in 1972? I was >> racing in 1972, and I certainly never saw anyone with wooden rims. As > > Maybe a track-only thing? I have no idea; I was 12 at that time. I was riding track at the time. Wooden rims would have been quite a sight. The only ones I saw from that time were from collections of old bikes. >> The one-bolt seatpost was also later, and I don't think it was a track > > That seatpost and saddle clamp look very similar to the one on my bike > from around that time, unless you're saying that *Campy* didn't have one > like that. That is what I meant. I have two Campy seatposts from roughly that era, one track, one road. Both are 2-bolt. > I took that "ridden once..." phrase to be referring to the rims, and not > the rest of the bike. Maybe, but it seems like this bike was built up from someone's parts bin. If so, over $1000 seems a bit steep. -- David L. Johnson A mathematician is a machine for turning coffee into theorems. -- Paul Erdos
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Date: 03 Aug 2007 12:18:32
From: David Kerber
Subject: Re: Hetchins Spyder track bike (1972)
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In article <2_idnQ3VH5661S7bnZ2dnUVZ_uWlnZ2d@ptd.net >, david.johnson@lehigh.edu says... > Rick wrote: > > eBay: http://easyurl.net/Hetchins_Spyder > > Odd. It's a pretty bike, but there are some things about this > description that strike me as odd. For one, wooden rims in 1972? I was > racing in 1972, and I certainly never saw anyone with wooden rims. As > close to it we had were the Scheeren (sp?) Weltmeister rims with balsa > wood to hold the rim's shape at the spoke holes. > > On the other hand, bladed spokes were also not around in '72. So these > wheels seem to be a mix of eras. > > The one-bolt seatpost was also later, and I don't think it was a track > part. The pedals are at least within the timeframe (barely), but are > road pedals. > > For a bike that was "ridden once at the World Championships", why would > the fork be drilled for a brake? To lighten it a bit? <G,D&R > -- Remove the ns_ from if replying by e-mail (but keep posts in the newsgroups if possible).
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