My Schwinn World Today |
Love of and Old Bicycle by John Z.
If you are anything like me you own a new high tech bike, with
a space age frame, super expensive super lite wheels, integrated shifters and
twenty speeds. If your also like me you
only ride it about 5% or less of your riding time. So what do I ride the other
95% of the time? It is defiantly not my
mountain bike, I don't even own one. The answer would be a 1983 Schwinn World.
And before that it was a 1985 Cannondale ST-500.
I know, I know, I am nuts right? Well let me explain a little why I have grown
to hate my space age bicycle and I will start with my riding style. First of all I am a practice cyclist, I ride
everywhere I can that has a purpose, need a bolt or a lite bulb at Home Depot. I ride.
Need to get to class. I
ride. Need to get to work. I ride.
Need groceries. I ride. Going out with friends on Friday night? I
ride. The list will go on...
This does not mean I don't ride for enjoyment, I do. I feel lost and foggy if I miss my morning
ride, like that feeling you have if you forgot your phone at home. One of the great joys in my life is riding
with no destination in mind, just out riding and seeing what happens, what I
find, what's around the corner? Riding on
a long trail in the fresh air out in the country.
You would think that with all this riding I would be singing
the praises of the newest everything in bicycle technologies when if fact the
new technologies do nothing to improve my riding. I need versatility in my bicycle for all the
demands I put on it, and i don't want to own five or six bikes to meet these
demands. This is not what a Trek Madone
one is designed for.
For years I have been trying to come up with a bicycle that fits
all my needs. First and foremost the
bike needs to be comfortable, 30 year old bike, check, space age bike, no
check. The bike needs to be capable of
fitting wide tires for the diverse surfaces I ride, old bike, check, modern
bike, no check. It needs to be simple
and reliable, old bike, check, modern bike, no check. It needs to have a rack and carry heavy
loads, old bike, check, modern race bike, no check. And most of all it needs to be inconspicuous,
old bike, check, new race bike, no check.
Can you imagine locking up a Cannodale Caad 10 locked up outside the
grocery store?
It has been an evolution, but I believe I have finally put
together the bike that fit all my needs and that is my Schwinn World. It is not even a world sport, just plain old
world. I got the bike for $10 at a
rummage sale. I rode it for many years
as a ten speed with a ridiculous bio pace crank. It has churned out many miles to work, school
and everywhere in between.
Over time I have made many changes and I have kept a running
total of the costs I put into it. The
first change I made was replace the suicide brake levers with ergonomic aero
levers I got for $8 on clearance. Next a
traded the bio pace crank for a new single speed crank that I originally put on
another project to sell, but ended up crashing before I sold. The rear wheel with a flip flop hub and cogs
came off that same bike, that I paid $40 clearance for the wheel and $1 for the
fixed cog at a swap meet and $4 used for the freewheel. The front wheel was donated from a customer
that I switched the wheels off of a project for him. Cost, free.
I had some 27" cross tires laying around the shop for years that
where still in good shape, still had the mold fringes, cost? I don't remember
where they came from the have been around so long, so we will put free on the
tag. The bar tape is used, it was
replaced on a customers bike. A little
soap and water and the price tag cleans up at free. The rack came with the bike. Grand total $63, not too shabby.
I forgot, I did add new modern brake calipers this week,
price, $20 and a mountain bike bio pace crank at a swap meet. Grand total $83 and a parts box crank. Next on my list and probably not the end of
the evolution will be some scavenged cross brake levers.
Now you may be asking, what about speed? That must be the slowest hunk of junk
around. My answer to that, I ride
two-hundred plus miles a week rain or snow, even more in the summer, these legs
aren't slow on any bike.
In the end I love this bike, the fit, the steel, the
character. I hope I am not the only one
who has fallen in love with a bike like this.
Its bikes like this that I believe can change the world, not thousands
of dollars modern race bikes.
Soon I will be writing about the true weight of a bike and the
new bicycle tunnels that are under construction in our area under some pretty
major roads.
I've put close to 5000 miles on a Schwinn Suburban. I keep thinking I need to trade up, but I never do...
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