Votational Ride

Even with the kickstarter project submitted for review things have not backed off a bit, but I took a 30 minute break to ride over to the local polling place and drop off the votes.

You voted, right?  I am sure you did.

Then the hustle home to keep the prep for the SF Expo under way.  I have had my idea and materials for the back drop on hand for a month now, but figured it would be a good thing to do a dry run before SF.

I am pretty stoked with how it came out.  The banner hangs ahead of the backdrop for a slight shadow box effect.  the string disappears on the canvas.  I need to make a couple of adjustments to keep it all tight, but I am happy with the plan.

Next up is cleaning up and re-cabling my blue Rambler.  Decals will be coming in overnight, thursday is going to be a busy morning.

Wiring Up Rambler No. 2

Rambler No.2 (Red) was going to be a cornerstone in the three bike heard that I am bringing to the SF expo in just a few days.  At 57cm it is square in the middle if medium and most likely to be getting test rides, that is until the fork was blasted instead of chemical stripped, and it is not really clear how much steel is still there.  After an assessment it was pretty clear that the fork is never going to be supporting a rider again, but it will hold up the front end of the bike for the expo, that is better than no bike and I decided to make lemonade with what I had.

The bottom of the right fork leg is pretty much gone just above the fork leg.  I thought about some ways to stabilize it, headed up the street to FCD surfboards, and the guys let me have some resin.  A tape mold, injection of epoxy through the vent hole and a few hours later I a confident that it will hold up to transport and display.

There is not enough left of the dropouts to mount a rack or fender, but I was able to make a Mark’s rack work to hold up the light.  That is when I went full in, and wired up the whole bike front and rear.  This bike is the first one of the batch to get the full dynamo lighting system.  That is front and rear lighting powered by the rotation of the front hub.

The chain ring bracket is perfect.  The wire from the hub to the headlight runs through the guides on the right fork leg.

The curly q wire allows the lighting wire to be installed or removed with the connectors intact on the wire ends.  I first saw this either on Alex Wetmore’s blog or on Flicker someplace. It works better than solid loops that will not pass the connectors in the event that you need to strip the lights with intentions of putting them back on.

In an ideal world the wires would be tucked under the fender for the run from the crown to the headlight and the returning tail light wire.  This being what it is, they are tied off to the rack.  The tail light wire enters into the frame through the port at the top of the down tube.

It passes along, protected from snagging, inside the down tube, around the bottom bracket and up the seat tube just a bit to the exit port.

There is a short exposed run along the left chain stay before it tucks into the rear fender.  To protect the wire from being cut by the sharp fender edge I used a commonly available rubber stress relief grommet.

the wire then runs along the inside edge of the fender. The Berthoud fenders are quite nice for this as the edge is rolled, but not crimped completely shut as it is on some other brands of metal fenders.

Once fully tucked in, you can crimp the channel shut just a bit, or use a few short beads of silicone to hold it in place.  The wire exits the rear of the fender through, another stress relief grommet, and then connects up to the tail light.

A quick spin of the front wheel to confirm that everything is still working and it is almost time to clean up.  I decided to secure the short run of wire between the seat tube ans the fender with a piece od red reflective tape that was a close enough color match.

While not everything I had dreamed for a complete bike, I am still pretty happy with the results, and when the replacement fork gets here it should go together pretty quickly.

Cotton and Shellac

With everything in the right places on the 51 porter conversion it was time to put the cherry on top.  There is something just right about the feel of cotton tape with just a few coats of shellac.  I have found that the orange tape, particularly Newbams, when paired with garnet shellac is not only a near perfect match for brooks leather saddles, but has a warm tone that you can not replicate any other way.  It is just one of those things that takes time, patience, and is a process you can not cheat on.  This project has a layer of Soma thick and zesty under the orange cotton, finished off with cotton twine and then three coats of garnet shellac, the pictures tell the rest of the story.

The amazing thing is the feel, grippy, but soft, with just a touch of cush.  It will soften with time, last for years with an occasional re-coat, and only look and feel better with usage.

And for the color, most would not know it isn’t leather unless you told them, a perfect match for a worn in Brooks.

One Rambler Done

Getting everything ready for the SF expo, a week from now, has been nuts.  That said the 51 porteur build on the sunflower Rambler is done.  I finished off the grips this morning, headed out for a test ride around the neighborhood and then back to the computer.

Now to wrap up the Kickstarter video, get the posters ready, finish detailing out the blur 63 Rambler and what I can of the red 57.

Never a dull moment, but still squeezing in rides where I can, just short ones.

Lesson No. 21,987

I am one of those sorts of people who learns by doing.  Sometimes by book or example first, but usually but jumping in and doing it.  Todays lesson?  Never audition a new coater on bike or part that you need, particularly soon.  The call came last evening, the blaster had shot a hole in the fork ?!?!?  The fork was in for a chemical strip, light blast only if touch-up was needed and then a new single coat of red.  The goal being a complete red 57cm Rambler for the SF Expo.  The first attempt at red had gone on too thick and yellow, and it was in for a re-do with a local.  He was not happy with how thick it came out and was going to do it a third time.  I figured the fork would be a good audition for having a local option to do custom color requests.

I went by the shop this morning to see the “hole”:

I am still not really sure how a blaster could do this exactly.  Obviously this fork will be retired.  We are currently working on a resolution, and I am sure between the blaster and the coater this will be made right.

With the cup being half full, I am in shock and awe that the wire guides are intact.  Also, it is clear that my guys in Portland are getting good brass penetration into the dropouts.  And last but not least, one less bike to transport to SF.

Trick or Treat?  I am hoping for the treats, this was not how I planned for the day to start.