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Date: 24 Jun 2007 13:33:04
From:
Subject: Who needs glue?
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The solid tire was the high-quality red-rubber version and originally tightened onto the rim a core wire at the splice, but it's shrunk enough to leave a huge tire-splice gap at about 11 o'clock. Every fourth spokes, you'll see a wire holding the tire to the rim: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mv0TWCr7/velomania_isop_det.jpg As you can see, the rear wheel has two problem spokes: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mZAghh7P/velomania_isop.jpg Solid red rubber tires in better condition: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNEFdmqB/velo_19.jpg New-fangled pneumatic tires for comparison, with gratutious wooden rims, block chain, and possibly replaceable front chain-ring: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nOVg6UuZ/velo_17.jpg Given these Finnish water bottles, it's no wonder that they're lying in a tangled heap by the side of the road: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHLxcgmJ/velo_6.jpg Angry villagers chasing highwheeler: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHM34RgZ/velo_13.jpg The Sawyer quadricycle that I was looking for when I stumbled over the other pictures. Note the early clipless pedals and the elegant seat bag: http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNBHwXwt/velo_3.jpg Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 25 Jun 2007 12:26:32
From: DougC
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > The solid tire was the high-quality red-rubber version and originally > tightened onto the rim a core wire at the splice, but it's shrunk > enough to leave a huge tire-splice gap at about 11 o'clock. > > Every fourth spokes, you'll see a wire holding the tire to the rim: > > http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mv0TWCr7/velomania_isop_det.jpg > ..... Do we have any evidence that the wires tying the tire on now were actually used when the bike was new? It looks like perhaps something that may have been done for display purposes, considering that the original tire was no longer supple enough to mount normally. ~
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Date: 25 Jun 2007 12:56:07
From:
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Mon, 25 Jun 2007 12:26:32 -0500, DougC <dcimper@norcom2000.com > wrote: >carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >> The solid tire was the high-quality red-rubber version and originally >> tightened onto the rim a core wire at the splice, but it's shrunk >> enough to leave a huge tire-splice gap at about 11 o'clock. >> >> Every fourth spokes, you'll see a wire holding the tire to the rim: >> >> http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mv0TWCr7/velomania_isop_det.jpg >> >..... > >Do we have any evidence that the wires tying the tire on now were >actually used when the bike was new? > >It looks like perhaps something that may have been done for display >purposes, considering that the original tire was no longer supple enough >to mount normally. >~ Dear Doug, I suppose that the museum might have put twenty or so wire loops on the tire to hold it in place for display purposes, but it seems unlikely--the two wires at the tire splice would have held it in place. Or even a zip tie or two. Note that most (but not all) of the wires have shifted around until they fetched up against a spoke, always in the same direction, counter clockwise in this view, which is the way that constant acceleration would drag them. (A few remain in the middle between two spokes, and the two at the splice are a special case.) Note the two tire-wires on the upper right of the small rear wheel. They look battered, not like something added long after the bike was no longer being ridden. Note on the large wheel how some wires are digging into the rubber quite noticeably, while others don't--this looks like the effects of either deterioration over the years, riding causing different wear rates, or someone twisting some wires tighter than a museum worker concerned only with keeping a display neat. Loose highwheeler tires were indeed wired in practice. Karl Kron mentions using some fine wire just to tie loose splice ends down: "I may as well say here that I have driven my second set of tires 4,700 miles, and that I think that at least another 1,000 miles will be required to 'pound them to rags.' The splice in the big tire worked loose in this second set, just as the splice in the little one worked loose in the first, though not until I had driven it some 2,500 miles, or more than ten times as far as in the first case. After two or three unsatisfactory experiments with cement, I had the loose end of the splice sewed down with fine wire; and this improvement lasted for 500 miles, or until the tip of the splice broke off." --"Ten Thousand Miles on a Bicycle," Karl Kron, p. 37-8 In fact, Kron used string instead of the heavy wire seen in the museum picture: "On the following day the little tire worked loose, for the first time in its history; and, for the first time in my experience, I made use of cemnent in re-setting it. I was obliged to ride ten miles before reaching the cement, however, and as the tire had been literally worn to shreds, and as my supply of string was rather limited, the tattered india-rubber would occasionally bulge out from the im far enough to strike the fork, and thus call my attention to its sad condition. In the large tire, also, an indentation, at the point where the two ends had been worn away [the splice gap], caused a definite jar at each revolution of the wheel during the last 600 miles." --"Ten THousand Miles on a Bicycle," Karl Kron, p. 47 Kron rode a small 46-inch highwheeler, so his Pope cyclometer ticked over roughly every 144 inches, a jar every 12 feet, or 264,000 jars in that 600 miles. That many bumps wears a noticeable hole in even a tiny gap where the tire ends meet. Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 25 Jun 2007 00:29:59
From: Sir Ridesalot
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Jun 24, 3:33 pm, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote: > > Given these Finnish water bottles, it's no wonder that they're lying > in a tangled heap by the side of the road: > > http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHLxcgmJ/velo_6.jpg > > Cheers, > > Carl Fogel Hi Carl. Great images. Wow! Check out the bladed front fork on the bike at the extreme left of the photo. I wonder if it was faster being more aero than the other two? VBG It is interesting just how little is truly new. Cheers from Peter
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Date: 25 Jun 2007 12:22:51
From:
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Mon, 25 Jun 2007 00:29:59 -0700, Sir Ridesalot <i_am_cycle_pathic@yahoo.ca > wrote: >On Jun 24, 3:33 pm, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote: > >> >> Given these Finnish water bottles, it's no wonder that they're lying >> in a tangled heap by the side of the road: >> >> http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHLxcgmJ/velo_6.jpg >> > >> Cheers, >> >> Carl Fogel > > >Hi Carl. Great images. > >Wow! Check out the bladed front fork on the bike at the extreme left >of the photo. I wonder if it was faster being more aero than the other >two? VBG > >It is interesting just how little is truly new. > >Cheers from Peter Dear Peter, Well, some things change. http://i13.tinypic.com/5495f0p.jpg Most riders worried about aerodynamics no longer wear watch chains, use squeeze-bulb horns, add mud-flaps to their fenders, ride on treaded tires, carry frame pumps, or smoke. They do use half-inch chain and sprockets, cable-controlled gears, cotterless cranks, and new-fangled air-valves on their tires. One out of three probably tries to fend photographers off with a stick. More seriously, the middle bike is probably faster than the left-hand bike, since it has hub gearing and top-tube mounted friction shifter. The bladed fork on the left bike is just simpler and cheaper to manufacture. Here's an 1885 patent (U.S. 313083) showing the steps needed to make a more complicated tubular fork: http://i16.tinypic.com/5zmrqtl.jpg Cheers*, Carl Fogel *Or Kippis, as those three Finnish riders might have said. The entry for Finland dwarfs all other entries in this list of translations for "Bottoms up!": http://www.awa.dk/glosary/slainte.htm
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Date: 26 Jun 2007 00:54:10
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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-snip- carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > http://i13.tinypic.com/5495f0p.jpg > More seriously, the middle bike is probably faster than the left-hand > bike, since it has hub gearing and top-tube mounted friction shifter. Looks like a Sturmey Archer K series quadrant to me. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 26 Jun 2007 00:38:23
From:
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Tue, 26 Jun 2007 00:54:10 -0500, A Muzi <am@yellowjersey.org > wrote: >-snip- >carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >> http://i13.tinypic.com/5495f0p.jpg >> More seriously, the middle bike is probably faster than the left-hand >> bike, since it has hub gearing and top-tube mounted friction shifter. > >Looks like a Sturmey Archer K series quadrant to me. Dear Andrew, If a date is any help, the Finnish caption suggests that the photo was taken around 1920 to 1930: "Pyörästä tuli kaiken kansan kulkupeli 1920–1930-luvulla. Polkupyörä avasi nuorille maaseudun miehille laajemmat ympyrät. Pyörillä liikuttiin kotikylistä kaupunkeihin, naapuripitäjiin, tansseihin ja muihin rientoihin. Kuva: M. Luhtala / Vapriikin kuva-arkisto." http://www.tampere.fi/vapriikki/media/kuvia/index.html Cheers, Carl Fogel
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Date: 26 Jun 2007 19:59:15
From: A R:nen
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > If a date is any help, the Finnish caption suggests that the photo was > taken around 1920 to 1930: > "Pyörästä tuli kaiken kansan kulkupeli 1920–1930-luvulla. Polkupyörä > avasi nuorille maaseudun miehille laajemmat ympyrät. Pyörillä > liikuttiin kotikylistä kaupunkeihin, naapuripitäjiin, tansseihin ja > muihin rientoihin. Kuva: M. Luhtala / Vapriikin kuva-arkisto." Very much "around" if the bottles contain what I think they do, Finland had prohibition from 1919 to 1934... "The bicycle became the people's favoured vehicle in the 1920s/30s. It opened a broader world for the young men of the countryside. Bikes were used for going from the home village to towns and neighbouring parishes, to dances and other activities. Photo: M. Luhtala / Vapriikki photo archive."
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Date: 26 Jun 2007 13:24:54
From:
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On 26 Jun 2007 19:59:15 +0300, oronkain@ling.helsinki.fi (A R:nen) wrote: >carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > >> If a date is any help, the Finnish caption suggests that the photo was >> taken around 1920 to 1930: > >> "Pyörästä tuli kaiken kansan kulkupeli 1920–1930-luvulla. Polkupyörä >> avasi nuorille maaseudun miehille laajemmat ympyrät. Pyörillä >> liikuttiin kotikylistä kaupunkeihin, naapuripitäjiin, tansseihin ja >> muihin rientoihin. Kuva: M. Luhtala / Vapriikin kuva-arkisto." > >Very much "around" if the bottles contain what I think they do, >Finland had prohibition from 1919 to 1934... > >"The bicycle became the people's favoured vehicle in the 1920s/30s. >It opened a broader world for the young men of the countryside. Bikes >were used for going from the home village to towns and neighbouring >parishes, to dances and other activities. Photo: M. Luhtala / >Vapriikki photo archive." Dear A, Thanks for the translation. Horrifyingly, many Finns defied their country's laws against liquor: "Finland. Prohibition is enacted (1917), but quickly fails as illicit distribution overly burdens police and smuggling becomes widespread (1919-1920)." http://www.tc.columbia.edu/centers/cifas/drugsandsociety/background/chronologydruguse.html "Based on the report of a Wickershamian commission which recently probed Finnish prohibition, the preamble to the Government bill declared: "In the past twelve years Prohibition has not produced the changes in the nation's habits which were expected. . . . On the contrary, the law has been openly and persistently violated.'" Monday, Dec. 14, 1931 Time magazine http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,930037,00.html Cheers, Alphonse Capone
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Date: 27 Jun 2007 11:52:40
From: A R:nen
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > Horrifyingly, many Finns defied their country's laws against liquor: > "Finland. Prohibition is enacted (1917), but quickly fails as illicit > distribution overly burdens police and smuggling becomes widespread > (1919-1920)." Certainly, but posing for self-incriminating photos in such a context does seem a bit over the top. (The law was originally approved already in 1907 but it didn't enter into force until 1919. Also, of course it ended on 5 Apr 32 at 10 o'clock, not 1934 as I wrote earlier.)
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Date: 01 Jul 2007 10:43:48
From: Jasper Janssen
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On 27 Jun 2007 11:52:40 +0300, oronkain@ling.helsinki.fi (A R:nen) wrote: >carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > >> Horrifyingly, many Finns defied their country's laws against liquor: > >> "Finland. Prohibition is enacted (1917), but quickly fails as illicit >> distribution overly burdens police and smuggling becomes widespread >> (1919-1920)." > >Certainly, but posing for self-incriminating photos in such a context >does seem a bit over the top. (The law was originally approved already >in 1907 but it didn't enter into force until 1919. Also, of course it >ended on 5 Apr 32 at 10 o'clock, not 1934 as I wrote earlier.) The Prohibition law may have been exactly why they were showing off so -- if it wasn't illegal, would *all three* have a liquor bottle and be defiantly showing it to the photographer? Jasper
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Date: 01 Jul 2007 11:03:37
From: RBrickston
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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> On 27 Jun 2007 11:52:40 +0300, oronkain@ling.helsinki.fi (A R:nen) wrote: > >carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > > > >> Horrifyingly, many Finns defied their country's laws against liquor: > > > >> "Finland. Prohibition is enacted (1917), but quickly fails as illicit > >> distribution overly burdens police and smuggling becomes widespread > >> (1919-1920)." > > > Certainly, but posing for self-incriminating photos in such a context > does seem a bit over the top. (The law was originally approved already > in 1907 but it didn't enter into force until 1919. Also, of course it > ended on 5 Apr 32 at 10 o'clock, not 1934 as I wrote earlier.) Self-incriminating? Pictures of liquor bottles are just that and only that. The contents of the liquor bottles would be impossible to prove.
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Date: 26 Jun 2007 16:25:46
From: Michael Press
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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In article <tep28357if6ijrc6ggvr0bdg07uq78npmu@4ax.com >, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > On 26 Jun 2007 19:59:15 +0300, oronkain@ling.helsinki.fi (A R:nen) > wrote: > > >carlfogel@comcast.net writes: > > > >> If a date is any help, the Finnish caption suggests that the photo was > >> taken around 1920 to 1930: > > > >> "Pyörästä tuli kaiken kansan kulkupeli 1920–1930-luvulla. Polkupyörä > >> avasi nuorille maaseudun miehille laajemmat ympyrät. Pyörillä > >> liikuttiin kotikylistä kaupunkeihin, naapuripitäjiin, tansseihin ja > >> muihin rientoihin. Kuva: M. Luhtala / Vapriikin kuva-arkisto." > > > >Very much "around" if the bottles contain what I think they do, > >Finland had prohibition from 1919 to 1934... > > > >"The bicycle became the people's favoured vehicle in the 1920s/30s. > >It opened a broader world for the young men of the countryside. Bikes > >were used for going from the home village to towns and neighbouring > >parishes, to dances and other activities. Photo: M. Luhtala / > >Vapriikki photo archive." > > Dear A, > > Thanks for the translation. > > Horrifyingly, many Finns defied their country's laws against liquor: > > "Finland. Prohibition is enacted (1917), but quickly fails as illicit > distribution overly burdens police and smuggling becomes widespread > (1919-1920)." > > http://www.tc.columbia.edu/centers/cifas/drugsandsociety/background/chronologydruguse.html > > "Based on the report of a Wickershamian commission which recently > probed Finnish prohibition, the preamble to the Government bill > declared: "In the past twelve years Prohibition has not produced the > changes in the nation's habits which were expected. . . . On the > contrary, the law has been openly and persistently violated.'" > > Monday, Dec. 14, 1931 Time magazine > > http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,930037,00.html I once heard it asserted that in the interval when the eighteenth ammendment was enforced, the per-capita amount of alcohol consumed in the USA decreased, and after it was repealed the consumption remained considerably lower than before the enactment, but that seems to be erroneous. <URL:http://www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-157.html > Nineteenth century temperance movements were very effective. <URL:http://digital.lib.msu.edu/projects/ssb/index.cfm?CollectionID=64 > One USA gallon of absolute alcohol is about 10 quarts of whisky. There is nothing to be gained by reducing per-capita consumption from 1.8 US gallon/ year, and no effective way to do it. The per-capita is computed from a drinking age of 15 years. -- Michael Press
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Date: 26 Jun 2007 10:58:08
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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>> -snip- >> carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >>> http://i13.tinypic.com/5495f0p.jpg >>> More seriously, the middle bike is probably faster than the left-hand >>> bike, since it has hub gearing and top-tube mounted friction shifter. > A Muzi <am@yellowjersey.org> wrote: >> Looks like a Sturmey Archer K series quadrant to me. carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > If a date is any help, the Finnish caption suggests that the photo was > taken around 1920 to 1930: > > "Pyörästä tuli kaiken kansan kulkupeli 1920–1930-luvulla. Polkupyörä > avasi nuorille maaseudun miehille laajemmat ympyrät. Pyörillä > liikuttiin kotikylistä kaupunkeihin, naapuripitäjiin, tansseihin ja > muihin rientoihin. Kuva: M. Luhtala / Vapriikin kuva-arkisto." > http://www.tampere.fi/vapriikki/media/kuvia/index.html The "K" shifter is distinctive and it's period-correct. I can't make anything of that Suomi caption. (AltaVista'a translator skips from Dutch to French) -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 24 Jun 2007 17:02:08
From: Hank Wirtz
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Jun 24, 4:40 pm, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote: > On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 13:33:04 -0600, carlfo...@comcast.net wrote: > >The solid tire was the high-quality red-rubber version and originally > >tightened onto the rim a core wire at the splice, but it's shrunk > >enough to leave a huge tire-splice gap at about 11 o'clock. > > >Every fourth spokes, you'll see a wire holding the tire to the rim: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mv0TWCr7/velomania_isop_det.jpg > > >As you can see, the rear wheel has two problem spokes: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mZAghh7P/velomania_isop.jpg > > >Solid red rubber tires in better condition: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNEFdmqB/velo_19.jpg > > >New-fangled pneumatic tires for comparison, with gratutious wooden > >rims, block chain, and possibly replaceable front chain-ring: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nOVg6UuZ/velo_17.jpg > > >Given these Finnish water bottles, it's no wonder that they're lying > >in a tangled heap by the side of the road: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHLxcgmJ/velo_6.jpg > > >Angry villagers chasing highwheeler: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHM34RgZ/velo_13.jpg > > >The Sawyer quadricycle that I was looking for when I stumbled over the > >other pictures. Note the early clipless pedals and the elegant seat > >bag: > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNBHwXwt/velo_3.jpg > > >Cheers, > > >Carl Fogel > > That silly thing has a 34-spoke radial front wheel: > > http://i19.tinypic.com/6bwj72t.jpg > > I counted the oddball 34 spokes twice before I gave up and numbered > them in a paint program. The rear wheel is a decent 36-spoke radial. > Maybe the manufacturer REALLY didn't want anyone respoking it with a crossing pattern...
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Date: 24 Jun 2007 17:40:24
From:
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 13:33:04 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >The solid tire was the high-quality red-rubber version and originally >tightened onto the rim a core wire at the splice, but it's shrunk >enough to leave a huge tire-splice gap at about 11 o'clock. > >Every fourth spokes, you'll see a wire holding the tire to the rim: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mv0TWCr7/velomania_isop_det.jpg > >As you can see, the rear wheel has two problem spokes: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mZAghh7P/velomania_isop.jpg > >Solid red rubber tires in better condition: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNEFdmqB/velo_19.jpg > >New-fangled pneumatic tires for comparison, with gratutious wooden >rims, block chain, and possibly replaceable front chain-ring: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nOVg6UuZ/velo_17.jpg > >Given these Finnish water bottles, it's no wonder that they're lying >in a tangled heap by the side of the road: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHLxcgmJ/velo_6.jpg > >Angry villagers chasing highwheeler: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHM34RgZ/velo_13.jpg > >The Sawyer quadricycle that I was looking for when I stumbled over the >other pictures. Note the early clipless pedals and the elegant seat >bag: > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNBHwXwt/velo_3.jpg > >Cheers, > >Carl Fogel That silly thing has a 34-spoke radial front wheel: http://i19.tinypic.com/6bwj72t.jpg I counted the oddball 34 spokes twice before I gave up and numbered them in a paint program. The rear wheel is a decent 36-spoke radial. The dingus hanging below the far side of the hub is probably a highwheeler-style mounting pedal, which was popular on early safeties, just like the highwheeler-style adjustable-slot crank pedals. Everyone was used to the highwheeler custom of pushing from the side to get going, stepping up, sitting, and _then_ putting the feet on the pedals. Similarly, everyone was used to adjusting the pedal length, not the seat height--like a highwheeler, this frame doesn't have a seat post. Note the highwheeler-style curve of the down-tube, hugging the arc of the front fender and tire. The thingies on the fork near the axle are fixie coasting pegs. The spoon brake has way too many adjustment holes. CF
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Date: 25 Jun 2007 13:38:35
From: waxbytes
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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carlfogel@comcast.net Wrote: > On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 13:33:04 -0600, carlfogel@comcast.net wrote > > >The solid tire was the high-quality red-rubber version and originall > >tightened onto the rim a core wire at the splice, but it's shrun > >enough to leave a huge tire-splice gap at about 11 o'clock > > >Every fourth spokes, you'll see a wire holding the tire to the rim > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mv0TWCr7/velomania_isop_det.jp > > >As you can see, the rear wheel has two problem spokes > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5mZAghh7P/velomania_isop.jp > > >Solid red rubber tires in better condition > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNEFdmqB/velo_19.jp > > >New-fangled pneumatic tires for comparison, with gratutious woode > >rims, block chain, and possibly replaceable front chain-ring > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nOVg6UuZ/velo_17.jp > > >Given these Finnish water bottles, it's no wonder that they're lyin > >in a tangled heap by the side of the road > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHLxcgmJ/velo_6.jp > > >Angry villagers chasing highwheeler > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nHM34RgZ/velo_13.jp > > >The Sawyer quadricycle that I was looking for when I stumbled over th > >other pictures. Note the early clipless pedals and the elegant sea > >bag > > >http://www.tampere.fi/kuvat/5nNBHwXwt/velo_3.jp > > >Cheers > > >Carl Foge > > That silly thing has a 34-spoke radial front wheel > > http://i19.tinypic.com/6bwj72t.jp > > I counted the oddball 34 spokes twice before I gave up and numbere > them in a paint program. The rear wheel is a decent 36-spoke radial > > The dingus hanging below the far side of the hub is probably > highwheeler-style mounting pedal, which was popular on early safeties > just like the highwheeler-style adjustable-slot crank pedals > > Everyone was used to the highwheeler custom of pushing from the sid > to get going, stepping up, sitting, and _then_ putting the feet on th > pedals. Similarly, everyone was used to adjusting the pedal length > not the seat height--like a highwheeler, this frame doesn't have > seat post > > Note the highwheeler-style curve of the down-tube, hugging the arc o > the front fender and tire > > The thingies on the fork near the axle are fixie coasting pegs > > The spoon brake has way too many adjustment holes > > CF I guess that this bicycle would not be UCI legal since it's "non-traditional" design with no seatube -- waxbytes
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Date: 24 Jun 2007 22:01:24
From: A Muzi
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: > That silly thing has a 34-spoke radial front wheel: > http://i19.tinypic.com/6bwj72t.jpg > I counted the oddball 34 spokes twice before I gave up and numbered > them in a paint program. The rear wheel is a decent 36-spoke radial. > The dingus hanging below the far side of the hub is probably a > highwheeler-style mounting pedal, which was popular on early safeties, > just like the highwheeler-style adjustable-slot crank pedals. > Everyone was used to the highwheeler custom of pushing from the side > to get going, stepping up, sitting, and _then_ putting the feet on the > pedals. Similarly, everyone was used to adjusting the pedal length, > not the seat height--like a highwheeler, this frame doesn't have a > seat post. > Note the highwheeler-style curve of the down-tube, hugging the arc of > the front fender and tire. > The thingies on the fork near the axle are fixie coasting pegs. > > The spoon brake has way too many adjustment holes. Cool photo. Wouldn't the brake adjusting holes correlate with stem height? -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org Open every day since 1 April, 1971
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Date: 24 Jun 2007 21:18:11
From:
Subject: Re: Who needs glue?
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On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 22:01:24 -0500, A Muzi <am@yellowjersey.org > wrote: >carlfogel@comcast.net wrote: >> That silly thing has a 34-spoke radial front wheel: >> http://i19.tinypic.com/6bwj72t.jpg >> I counted the oddball 34 spokes twice before I gave up and numbered >> them in a paint program. The rear wheel is a decent 36-spoke radial. >> The dingus hanging below the far side of the hub is probably a >> highwheeler-style mounting pedal, which was popular on early safeties, >> just like the highwheeler-style adjustable-slot crank pedals. >> Everyone was used to the highwheeler custom of pushing from the side >> to get going, stepping up, sitting, and _then_ putting the feet on the >> pedals. Similarly, everyone was used to adjusting the pedal length, >> not the seat height--like a highwheeler, this frame doesn't have a >> seat post. >> Note the highwheeler-style curve of the down-tube, hugging the arc of >> the front fender and tire. >> The thingies on the fork near the axle are fixie coasting pegs. >> >> The spoon brake has way too many adjustment holes. > >Cool photo. >Wouldn't the brake adjusting holes correlate with stem height? Dear Andrew, I think that you're right. There's what looks like a huge set-screw for raising and lowering the handlebar. But it implies--gulp!--about half-a-foot of stem adjustment, judging by the two bolts, the 7 holes, and the handy scale provided by the inch-pitch teeth on the front sprocket. Cheers, Carl Fogel
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