AIDS Ride, first official training ride down

Sunday, Jan 3. 2010  –  Category: Outdoors

I went on my first official AIDS Ride training ride yesterday… a “Category 1″ (the slowest pace group, average speed of 7-8mph) training ride leaving Orinda, and lasting 24 miles.  Turns out it was a bit slow for my pace, and I ended up riding in a breakaway pack that was riding up front.  I’ll try the Category 2 ride next week instead (11-15mph) which should be more my style I think.

In other news, I’ve managed to raise $2320 so far!  Only $680 left to go to meet my goal of raising $3000 for the San Francisco AIDS Foundation.  Surely one of your New Years’ resolutions was to donate to stevel’s 545 mile bike ride from SF to LA, right?  If not, hopefully one of your resolutions involved donating to charity?  ;-)   In any case, if you haven’t donated yet, I (and the SF AIDS Foundation) would really appreciate your donation and support

New Schwinn parts arrived

Tuesday, Sep 1. 2009  –  Category: Outdoors

Got a whole bunch of new parts for the Schwinn yesterday… the seatpost (Wald 13/16″) and rail clamp, the saddle (Brooks B17 leather narrow), brakes (Tektro RX 4.1), brake calipers (Pyramid), and bottom bracket (Shimano UN54).

Sadly the brake calipers have way too long a reach… apparently they are 61-94mm. I’m guessing I need about a 50-55mm on the rear and maybe as short as a 40-45 on the front. Gonna have to take measurements tonight and see.

Rebuilding a Schwinn Varsity

Monday, Aug 24. 2009  –  Category: Musings

Ever since getting a 2009 Schwinn Fastback roadbike for a new recreational hobby, I’ve been wanting to learn more about the mechanics of bikes.. mostly so I can learn how to work on one myself to better do some of my own maintenance.

Working with software for so long made me forget the joy of simple pleasures like turning a wrench and getting your hands dirty.

Anyway, rather than destroy my brand new bike, I decided to destroy and old bike instead… a neighbour of mine had an old 1971 Schwinn Varsity sitting out (who knows for how long) who was kind enough to donate it to the cause.

Originally this came as a Kool Lemon 10 speed. I took a bunch of before photos. All the components on it were stock.. and rusty.

In the weeks since I’ve stripped everything off its frame.. with the goal of rebuilding it into a single-speed commute bike to ride to work on. (Mostly because I don’t want to deal with the complexity of a geared bike as my first rebuild). I bought new wheels, tires, tubes, hub, crankset, bottom bracket, chain, pedals, toeclips, saddle, seatpost, stem, bars, and brakes…in other words, every thing except the frame, fork and headset.

I picked up some random no name black race wheels off of eBay, with tires, tubes, and a flip/flop single-speed/fixed hub and cog set. This past weekend I threw the old one piece crank on (stripped down to just the original inner 39t chainring), with the original chain but with the new wheels to see how it rode as a single speed (albeit with no brakes, which made things…. interesting).

Here’s some photos of how it looks as a single-speed with the new rims.

Finding new parts for this has been an interesting challenge. Many of the sizes/specs used by Schwinn 38 years ago are different now. Also, the bike originally was a 37 pound beast. I’ve been attempting to strip and replace many of the heavier parts.

Finding a quill stem has been the most difficult. The original was a 21.1mm steel monstrosity that’s heavy enough to do some serious damage as a weapon. I ended up finding an equally old (mid-70′s) Schwinn Continental stem which had the exact same diameter, and dive angle – but made of aluminum for some considerable weight savings.

Taking off the kickstand saved 1.1 pounds. !!! Seriously.

The cranks + bottom bracket was also interesting… the bike originally had an old BMX style bottom bracket size with an old school one piece crank. I had a helluva time finding a bottom bracket adapter to convert it to the new Euro style 68mm bottom bracket, but ended up finding one after about a week and a half of searching. It’s awaiting a new Pake 44t + 165m crankset slated to arrive next week.

The rest of the components should be arriving this week or next week, I’m really looking forward to getting it all together and riding it for its first real ride. My test ride yesterday worked well, but stopping with no brakes on a hill involved me running into my empty garbage cans which worked but isn’t really a scalable solution.. :)

Can’t wait to get this puppy all together..


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