Hello all,
I thought I'd share my recent project. It may not appeal to all, but I've had this bike since 1992 and we have some great memories together. I've upgraded it to fixie, using a bolt-on adaptor and after initially running 46:18 I'm now running 36:20, which is much better for the snow and ice of an Icelandic winter.
I got a great deal on some secondhand Hope Mono6 brakes, both with 203mm rotors, and my main hardtail MTB already had Hope Minis, so I grasped the opportunity to do a chop 'n' change. I put a Mono6 on the front wheel of each bike, and the Trek now runs a Mini on the rear wheel, with a 140mm rotor.
I made the disc mounts and the jigs myself, then got a local guy to weld them in place. The front is 8mm stainless steel plate, and the rear is 8mm aluminium plate. I managed to get the jigs right and I'd say the accuracy of the mounts is within 0.5mm.
I thought I'd share my recent project. It may not appeal to all, but I've had this bike since 1992 and we have some great memories together. I've upgraded it to fixie, using a bolt-on adaptor and after initially running 46:18 I'm now running 36:20, which is much better for the snow and ice of an Icelandic winter.
I got a great deal on some secondhand Hope Mono6 brakes, both with 203mm rotors, and my main hardtail MTB already had Hope Minis, so I grasped the opportunity to do a chop 'n' change. I put a Mono6 on the front wheel of each bike, and the Trek now runs a Mini on the rear wheel, with a 140mm rotor.
I made the disc mounts and the jigs myself, then got a local guy to weld them in place. The front is 8mm stainless steel plate, and the rear is 8mm aluminium plate. I managed to get the jigs right and I'd say the accuracy of the mounts is within 0.5mm.