Okay. So you did take a second look at the bike. You asked a few people around and found out that its a Netherlandish or nederlandish design from the days when your greatgrandpa had more teeth, and that it has a good amount of value. Then the next important question is, what do you do with it? Do you restore or recondition it?
Vin Vullo, apart from having strong opinions on the ills of modern bikes and cyclists wearing tight fitting clothes (see Wheeling Through History, The Boston Pheonix May '08), has also been buying and selling vintage bicycles since the 1960s. In 1995 as the internet gained in popularity he founded Menotomy Vintage Bicycles and moved his business to the web at OldRoads.com. His company's web site has many tools and resources for people interested in vintage bicycles, including a picture database, an online price guide, serial number charts and a dozen discussion areas where collectors can post questions and provide answers for other bike collectors.
I've collected a series of nice video presentations he gave on vintage bikes through Expertvillage. He walks us through from an introduction to vintage bikes, to the question of restoring vs reconditioning.
While you're at it, also pay special attention to design elements in the common style of vintage bikes, for a lot of those elements have carried on and are seen in present bikes as well. For example, apart from the double diamond frame design which I already talked about in a previous post, the remnants of the cantilever frame design has also stuck in road bikes and cruisers. Another point of interest is the front fork design. You may see a relation between the front suspension of Jeff Jones' Monster Truck MTB and vintage fork designs of balloon tired bicycles from the 1930's. Nothing extremely 'out of the book', if you ask me :
Enjoy the presentations.
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Intro To Vintage Bicycles
Intro To Vintage Bicycles -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
What Makes Vintage Bicycles
What Makes Bicycles Vintage -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Why Do People Collect Vintage Bicycles?
Why People Collect Vintage Bicycles -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Styles of vintage bicycles
Vintage Bicycle Styles -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Balloon Tire Bicycles (1940's)
Popular Vintage Bicycles: 1940s -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Middle Weight Bicycles (1950's)
Popular Vintage Bicycles: 1950s -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Sting Ray Bicycles (1960's)
Popular Vintage Bicycles: 1960s -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
3 Speed Bicycles (1970's)
Popular Vintage Bicycles: 1970s -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
English 3 speed bicycles
English 3-Speed Bicycles -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
English Rod Brakes
English Bicycle Rod Brakes -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
English Bicycle Cable Brakes
English Bicycle Cable Brakes -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Pre and Post War Vintage Bikes
Pre-War & Post-War Vintage Bicycles -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bike Serial Numbers
Vintage Bicycle Serial Numbers -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Rims
Vintage Bicycle Rims -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Hubs
Vintage Bicycle Hubs -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Tires
Vintage Bicycle Tires -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Reflectors
Vintage Bicycle Reflectors -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Accessories
Vintage Bicycle Accessories -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Head Badges
Vintage Bicycle Head Badges -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Vintage Bicycle Literature
Collecting Vintage Bicycle Literature -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Do You Restore Or Recondition A Vintage Bicycle?
Vintage Bicycles: Restore or Recondition -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
Restoring A Vintage Bicycle
Vintage Bicycles: Restoring -- powered by ExpertVillage.com
3 comments:
Thanks for the nice videos. Also want to point out that even belt drives aren't anything new. They've been used on motorcycles for many years, and Strida first introduced it in their folding bikes back in the 80's.
The monster mtb is actually a rigid fork, not a suspension.
Ron, Both bikes are without front suspension. By your logic, you could say any rigid fork was designed to replace a suspension fork. I know its more compliant, but thats all.
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