The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Brett3938 » Sun Oct 21, 2018 7:30 pm
Frame is 1.773 still had seat bolt in dont know if that will make to much difference
Forks is 682
So all up is 2.445
Dont know if thats good or not
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Andrew James » Sun Dec 30, 2018 2:35 pm
Keith Davis Reynolds 531 competition ladies frame.
1853g frame
649g original 531 fork (the Profile carbon fork is 515g)
All up the bike weighs about 8.5kg, with the mainly Ultrgra-level equipment plus 500g for the rear rack.
Swapped the fork out for a carbon fork weighing a little less, but I'm inclined to swap back to the steel fork as the steering is a little twitchy with the carbon forks. The only other issue i have is that the brake bridge is too low - even through there's heaps of seat tube clearance, anything wider than a 25c rear tyre won't clear the brake bridge.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Andrew James » Sun Dec 30, 2018 2:42 pm
2173g frame (Ishiwata EX tubeset) 57cm ctc
830g forks (Stamped Tange)
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Andrew James » Sun Dec 30, 2018 3:13 pm
2614g frame (Reynolds 653, including the carbon fibre beam come seatpost, so subtract 250g of seat post savings, gives a comparable weight of say 2364g)
685g forks (Reynolds 653)
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Andrew James » Fri Mar 15, 2019 12:53 am
Paired to alpha Q forks 470grams
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby familyguy » Fri Mar 22, 2019 9:04 am
Paconi
59ST x 58.5TT c/c
Columbus "SLX New"
2935gr (incl. Shimano HP-6500 600 Ultegra sealed bearing headset listed at 110gr)
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby P!N20 » Thu May 23, 2019 12:52 pm
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-46143399
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby uart » Thu May 23, 2019 6:56 pm
LOL P!N, but we have people here who are still using analog bathroom scales that aren't even accurate to the nearest kg.P!N20 wrote:Can everyone please re-weigh their frames using die kleine h calibrated scales? Thanks.
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-46143399
https://bicycles.net.au/forums/viewtopi ... t#p1464579
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby 10speedsemiracer » Thu May 23, 2019 7:13 pm
Thanks P!N20, however I somehow managed to become confused...the correlation between Le Grand K and Die Kleine h was murky to my discombobulated brain, and have now measured my Reynolds 531 Raleigh frame/fork as being a banana over 4 units of the Special K which relates to the equivalent of 4 500gm packets of cereal .....P!N20 wrote:Can everyone please re-weigh their frames using die kleine h calibrated scales? Thanks.
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-46143399
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby P!N20 » Thu May 23, 2019 8:09 pm
Hope Woolies get their registers calibrated soon, I’m not paying Le Grand K prices.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby munga » Thu Jun 06, 2019 8:50 pm
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby P!N20 » Fri Jun 07, 2019 1:04 pm
Hmph. New guy.munga wrote:all this weighing is getting me down, man..
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Jebzey » Sat Jun 08, 2019 8:11 pm
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby stomach_bug » Tue Jul 16, 2019 12:48 pm
1940g frame
704g fork
My tape measure has gone walkabouts but I think this was about 54cm seat tube to BB.
This one was originally labelled as 'Dynaloy Triple butted'
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Stealthy Ninja » Wed Nov 27, 2019 9:04 pm
This mystery frame is 2295g (frame alone) with the forks being 825g. It's 57cm TT and 55cm ST.
Is this considered light for a 1950-60s frame? Also, what could it be and what sort of steel? It has a 26.4mm seat tube if that helps, I know Reynolds 531 usually takes 27.2mm seat tubes so I don't think it's Reynolds 531 steel, but I'm happy to be mistaken.
The lugs are similar to if not exactly the same as the ones on Malvern Star 5 star bikes, so it could be similar.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby uart » Wed Nov 27, 2019 10:29 pm
It's not ultra light or anything, but that weight is still quite is reasonable.Stealthy Ninja wrote: ↑Wed Nov 27, 2019 9:04 pmThis mystery frame is 2295g (frame alone) with the forks being 825g. It's 57cm TT and 55cm ST.
Is this considered light for a 1950-60s frame? Also, what could it be and what sort of steel? It has a 26.4mm seat tube if that helps
The seatpost diameter indicates that the ST wall thickness is approx 1.0 mm (and may or may not be butted). An ok quality high tensile "gas pipe" bike is typically about 1.2 to 1.3 mm wall thickness there, so 1.0 mm would normally be something a little better. (So it definitely could be CrMo.)
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Stealthy Ninja » Thu Nov 28, 2019 2:03 am
uart wrote: ↑Wed Nov 27, 2019 10:29 pmIt's not ultra light or anything, but that weight is still quite is reasonable.Stealthy Ninja wrote: ↑Wed Nov 27, 2019 9:04 pmThis mystery frame is 2295g (frame alone) with the forks being 825g. It's 57cm TT and 55cm ST.
Is this considered light for a 1950-60s frame? Also, what could it be and what sort of steel? It has a 26.4mm seat tube if that helps
The seatpost diameter indicates that the ST wall thickness is approx 1.0 mm (and may or may not be butted). An ok quality high tensile "gas pipe" bike is typically about 1.2 to 1.3 mm wall thickness there, so 1.0 mm would normally be something a little better. (So it definitely could be CrMo.)
Thanks for that, I didn't expect it to be the best out there, but to know it's reasonable is a win for me.
It's better than the Repco Superlight I have floating around at least.
Any idea what 1mm CrMo steel from the 1950/60s would be called?
Reynolds 500 would be fair? That was made later right? I might put Reynolds stickers on there though that's might be considered slightly egregious by some, I don't want to be too dishonest, so I won't put 531 decals on there. Or would it more likely be another brand? Basically, what would be the most likely steel they would have used considering the measurements? Or is putting nothing more realistic?
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby uart » Thu Nov 28, 2019 11:54 am
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Stealthy Ninja » Thu Nov 28, 2019 3:49 pm
I tracked down this Claude Butler fame that is from the same approx. manufacture date, has the same basic structure has the same size seat tube. It has 531 tubing, so it's POSSIBLE it could be 531 tubing on my frame... (EDIT: Nope, it's got seamed tubes... )
Shrug... good enough for me, it's a Claud Butler now.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby WyvernRH » Fri Nov 29, 2019 9:15 am
Well one thing I can tell you is that with a chainstay bridge and headlugs like that it is definitely not a Claud Butler. I would say it is a 99% chance you have a 1950's Australian frame, my eyeball guess is a Speedwell from frames I've seen before.Stealthy Ninja wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2019 3:49 pmShrug... good enough for me, it's a Claud Butler now.
531 has been around since 1935 and seat tube diameter is not that simple. See https://kuromori.home.blog/reynolds-531/ for more info. There was a whole range of other high quality tubing seamless tubing available since the 1930's from several manufacturers in the UK, let alone the Oz and European stuff (such as Accles & Pollock, BTM etc) Is your frame seamless or seamed tubing? Easiest place to check is inside the downtube at the bottom bracket. If it is seamed it isn't top quality but can still be chrome moly.
Steel tubing of all qualities was made in Oz at this point in time, if it is a Speedwell from the 50's my bet is on some variation from the Oz steel mills.
Richard
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Stealthy Ninja » Sun Dec 01, 2019 12:00 am
You’re the second person who’s said it looks like a Speedwell (I asked elsewhere too) seems it might well be.WyvernRH wrote: ↑Fri Nov 29, 2019 9:15 amWell one thing I can tell you is that with a chainstay bridge and headlugs like that it is definitely not a Claud Butler. I would say it is a 99% chance you have a 1950's Australian frame, my eyeball guess is a Speedwell from frames I've seen before.Stealthy Ninja wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2019 3:49 pmShrug... good enough for me, it's a Claud Butler now.
531 has been around since 1935 and seat tube diameter is not that simple. See https://kuromori.home.blog/reynolds-531/ for more info. There was a whole range of other high quality tubing seamless tubing available since the 1930's from several manufacturers in the UK, let alone the Oz and European stuff (such as Accles & Pollock, BTM etc) Is your frame seamless or seamed tubing? Easiest place to check is inside the downtube at the bottom bracket. If it is seamed it isn't top quality but can still be chrome moly.
Steel tubing of all qualities was made in Oz at this point in time, if it is a Speedwell from the 50's my bet is on some variation from the Oz steel mills.
Richard
Good thing I didn’t order any Claud Butler decals haha.
EDIT: I previously said it's seamless, but after I cleaned up the seat tube I can see a seam in there, therefore it's NOT seamless.
I’m probably never going to know exactly what it is, so which speedwall decals would match it from your experience:
www.cyclomondo.net/page33.htm
Do you also think it could be a Hoffy frame, I think his system was for serial numbers just to go up numerically, but who knows what he did in the 1950s. I’m just not too sure what the 5352 means.
In that case I might get these decals
As it’s likely it was made by a local maker here in Brisbane and Hoffy or Tom Wallace fit the bill the best.
Sorry for hijacking this thread a little
IF ANYONE WANTS TO HELP ME, PLEASE GO HERE: viewtopic.php?f=23&t=102235&p=1498754#p1498754
So this thread can remain untainted from my hijacking.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby prador » Mon Dec 23, 2019 12:31 am
Ishiwata Magny-V
Frame 2380g
Forks 810g
Not too bad considering the bike itself was pretty heavy.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby Stealthy Ninja » Mon Feb 10, 2020 1:40 pm
Made October 1987
57cm TT
59cm ST
Frame 2150g with bottom bracket (so probably 1850g)
Fork 750g
Apparently it was made with 531c tubing but the sticker on it says 531.
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Re: The Bare Frame and Fork Weight Thread
Postby familyguy » Sat Nov 21, 2020 3:59 pm
3.32kg frame and fork with Hatta Vesta headset
Beefy. I still reckon with the Athena 11s group (weighed at 1.9kg) plus wheels and required parts I could manage a c.10kg bike.
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