Friday, August 26, 2011

1976 Fuji Sports 10 Single-Speed


UPDATE: I have since built this one back into a 12 speed and gave it to a friend who's children told their parents that they need to get bikes!  I had come across a fuji mixtie frame from the 70's and gave that one along with this sports 10 to them to use.  I think the only single speed I'll use is my fuji track bike, at the velodrome.

Do you remember the 'extra' frame I received when I picked up my 80's Fuji Track Frame up in New York?  After seeing my blog, Zachary (the craigslist seller of the track frame) gave me this orange Sports 10 frame as well.  Thankfully my friend Jeff was there to help carry it home on the train.  

I took it not knowing what I was going to do with it.  I attended a swap meet in Trexlertown last spring (there is another one this October 1st), and bought an 1/8" 18 tooth suntour single-speed freewheel.  I was going to put it on the other side of the sunshine professional track wheel that is on the track bike, but realized there are not brake holes in the frame.  I don't want to mess that up by drilling any, and am keeping that bike for the sole purpose of riding the track (its intended purpose anyway).  After putting together the track bike, I ended up with a couple of extra 1/8" chainrings.  I had been avoiding the learning curve of realigning a rear axle on a multi-speed hub and re-dishing the rim that is necessary when converting from multiple gears to one gear on bikes like this.  So, I decided that it was time to do that with the orange Sports 10.   It actually wasn't that difficult, just a bit time consuming really.  I went ahead and rebuilt the wheels with new spokes to help it look nicer, and thanks again to Alan at Alan's Bicycles in Phoenixville, Pa.  He had the warm and comfy looking brown saddle that completes the bike and fits its style.  Maybe someday I'll rebuild the wheels again to swap out the gold rims from the Fuji Royale II.  

I've set up the gearing with a 47 tooth chainring in the front, and an 18 tooth cog in the rear.  This gives about a 70 inch gear, which is a good mid-range gearing for moderate hills like the ones around here.  I don't think I'll be taking this on really long road rides, but I will be taking it on the Perkiomen Trail for sure.  

I'm happy to add another type of ride to my Fuji stable.  There is the track racer, the road racer (opus III), the tourer (touring series iv), the everyday use workhorse (royale II), and the jovial 3-speed (bedford).  I'm going to have alot of fun on this single-speed.  Maybe I'll get out in the snow with it this winter.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Around and Around in T-Town

Standing on the apron.
Up at the boards.
Sprinting to the finish on the left.


I finally made it to the track here in Trexlertown.  It is called the Valley Preferred Cycling Center, and it is a wonderful place.  I can't wait to start bringing my daughters here.  Tonight was the last class of 8 sessions for the adult basic course that they offer to the community.  There were about 18 or so of us, and we learned about gears, some of the events, and some of the tactics of the sport.  We honed our pace-lining skills, but most importantly we enjoyed being out here going round and round as fast as we can.  The class was not what I expected.  It was basically a training session, which is good, but I thought it was going to be slower paced.  The competitiveness really came out of me during these classes when we were doing the mock races.  

I need better technology so my videos come out clearer, but the one above at least gives you some sense of the track itself.  Toward the end it pans around full circle.  

The Fuji track bike did splendidly.  We got laminated gear charts tonight, and on it says that Fuji is the official bike of the center.  I wonder how that came to be.   

One thing I haven't gotten to do yet is attend some of the major racing that happens here on Friday nights through the summer.  The last one is this Friday, but I won't be able to make it either.  I'll have to wait for next summer.  In the meantime, I will try to get up here as much as I can to ride.  I'm enjoying it as much as I thought I would.

A Hidden Fuji

Eugene A. Sloane passed away a few years ago.  His book, The Complete Book of Bicycling published in 1970, is one of  if not the most comprehensive on the subject.  He also wrote the Bicycle Maintenance Manual, published in 1981.  I have read through both of these books numerous times, but I don't always look closely at sections I feel I grasp fully.  However, I was looking closer at his mechanic book this morning, and noticed that a classic fuji is featured in a few of the pictures.  I recognized it because my eye happened to catch the headbadge, only half of which is in view.  It appears in pages 113-116, and it looks like it might be the Finest model.  It is used to demonstrate how to install bar end shifters.  

I suppose he didn't mention Fujis in his first book because they weren't imported into the US until 1971.  I wonder what he thought of the Fuji bicycles.  

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Interview with Bill Schroder, A Bikecentennial 76 Ride Leader

On the B76 Ride somewhere in the midwest
Bill Schroder in 2006.

If you are familiar with Adventure Cycling, then you might also be familiar with the Bikecentennial 76 (B76).  If not, then briefly, it is a large cross country bicycle ride that happened in the United States of  America in the summer of 1976.  Everyone was put into groups, and each group had a leader.  Well, a few weeks ago I was on a ride taking the Perkiomen Trail back to the house.  A man was sitting on a bench holding what I initially thought was a map.  I wasn't going to turn around, but I did, just to check in and see if there was anything I could help with.  It was just a newspaper, and I quickly realized from the look of his bike, that this was an experienced cyclist who knows what he is doing.  Like any experienced cyclist, he also knows how to take his time, and enjoy life.  I took a "brake", and we chatted a bit.  It turns out that he was a ride leader on the infamous Bikecentennial 76!  He gave me a card with contact info, and on the way home I got the idea to blog a brief interview about his experience with that.  He was happy to do it, so here it is!

AN INTERVIEW WITH BILL SCHRODER:

A Ride Leader of Bikecentennial

 

Question 1.  How did you become a ride leader for Bikecentennial?

 

I lived in Virginia Beach, VA in the 1970s and in 1975 I was president of the Tidewater Bicycle Association and gave input for the eastern VA portion of the B-76 route.  As a result I was invited to be part of the first leadership training group which took place at an American Youth Hostel in Bowmansville, PA.  From the training groups leaders were chosen based on their camping and biking expertise, as well as their ability to motivate and work with others.  In addition to this training enabling me to be a group leader, I met the woman who has become my lifelong partner and friend.

 

 

Question 2.  What were your responsibilities as a ride leader?

 

Each group consisted of between ten and twenty people of varying ages.  Some groups stayed in youth hostels, churches etc. and other groups were organized to be full camping including cooking.  Also the distances varied; some cycled a portion of the country and some did the whole country.  Each trip was described in a B-76 catalog.  The full country trips took 82 days but there were four “fast trips” cycling the country in 58 days; one each way of hostel and camping.  I was lucky enough to lead the west to east fast camping trip.  Both the hostel and camping groups were self-contained.  This meant carrying on your bike everything you needed; clothes, repair tools, camping equipment as well as food for that day.  We had “group” stoves and gas canisters.  Every day two riders were appointed to cook the evening meal and the next day breakfast.  It made for some very interesting meals.

 

Each group had a leader and assistant leader.  Their duties varied by their abilities.  All leaders were responsible for the group funds, allocating funds each day for groceries, camp ground fees etc.  In addition the leader was responsible for the member’s wellbeing.  This ranged from motivating riders to bicycle repair, to minor first aid and discipline as necessary.  Luckily in my group the latter was not necessary.  B-76 was the first time this type of trip had ever been done on such a large scale.  B-76 headquarters was unable to provide much support once you left the starting point and it was up to the leader to improvise.  While each member was supplied guidebooks and maps, none of us had ever been in most of the places we were going.  While the group looked to me to know the way, in truth most of the time I did not have any more knowledge then they did.  The leader was expected to use common sense and his abilities to get through.  In eastern KY our maps said to “take a right at the large tree”.  As most people know KY is not a desert and there are lots of trees.  Luckily at what I thought was the turn there was a farmhouse and a nice grandmotherly lady was rocking on the porch.  Her comment to my question about directions was “bicyclists keep going up that road and never come back”.  In summary, the leader did what had to be done on any given day.  Of the 17 people in my group who started from Reedsport, Oregon, 17 made it to see the ocean in VA Beach, VA.

 

 

Question 3.  What was the biggest challenge that your group faced together?

 

When you go on this kind of adventure every day holds challenges, whether it is mountains, heat or rain.  Probably the biggest challenge was to keep the desire to cycle every day.  When we first met in Reedsport in my first talk I told them that it is not possible to cycle across the United States, it is not possible to cycle across Oregon BUT is possible to cycle to the next soda break and the one after that and one day you will find yourself on the other side of the country.  Our biggest single challenge was when we were camped in Ste. Genivieve, MO .  About 2 AM a tornado came through and although luckily it did not directly hit us, the winds still took all the tents down and everything we had was completely soaked.  The police evacuated us to a local church.  The next day became an unplanned rest day as we dried clothes, repaired tents etc.  One vivid memory I have was the $4,000 in traveler’s checks lying in a puddle in my tent.  The local bank said they would replace them but could not until I could separate and dry them.  I still remember giving a hundred dollar check to each lady at a beauty parlor who put them on their heads and got under a dryer.

 

 

Question 4.  Were any members in your group changed in deep, personal ways                                    from  having participated in Bikecentennial?

 

I believe every person who did B-76 was changed and every person who I have ever talked to, be it from my group of other groups say they will never forget that trip.  One cannot do something like this without having a lifetime of memories.  Some of us have continued to do trips and keep cycling while others have moved on.  But I doubt a single one of us will ever forget it.  To this day what four of us still keep in touch and my best friend from that that trip, a “young” Dutch man; not so young now goes on regular cycling trips with me.  He, my partner and I have cycled throughout Europe and the United states together over the last 30 plus years.

 

 

Question 5.  What two memories from Bikecentennial replay themselves most often                            in your mind?

 

There are too many to ever tell about.  There was Gene Chu buying a ten pound bag of ice each day and putting it in his front handlebar bag in the desert of eastern Oregon.  There were two of our younger riders riding into wet tar and then braking with the expected consequences in Kansas.  But the best memories I have is meeting the people along the route.  B-76 was the largest event ever done for this length.  Seeing other cyclists in the most remote places, and having locals waving to us, buoyed our spirits beyond belief.  In western Oregon, just a few days into the trip, a young girl and her mother came to our camping area with a cake and said how much they admired us.  In Kansas there was “the ice cream lady” who gave homemade ice cream to us.  She literally would chase us down in her car and take us to her home.  Nobody who cycled B-76 will ever forget the “cookie lady” of VA.  She had a home just off the Blue Ridge Parkway in VA and started giving out cookies to the cyclists.  To this day she still does and over the years she added a bunkhouse to give shelter to the cyclists.  She literally has become a legend on the trail.

Bikecenntenial is now known as Adventure Cycling but for us “old times” it will always be B-76.