30-year Recycle

What a great story and it has the heart and soul of what cycling is all about :) Not an easy thing to find these days.

I'll be looking out for the frame landing in NZ and the reunited pics, all the best with your rebuild :)
 
Facebook Posting #7 - Reunited

As Neil Sedaka pumped out “breaking up is hard to do” but what he didn’t say was that the making-up is something special that you really look forward to. And it felt good.

Yesterday my divorce officially ended. I was reunited finally with my road-bike frame, some 35-years after we first met. Sure, when we first met in 1980 the love was deep but like all relationships, it was then an on/off time ala, Burton and Taylor well, to be honest if you know me, probably more Gavin and Stacey.

But still, the unpacking and then those first impressions gained, felt good.

Sure, she may not have aged that well in places, with her wrinkled chrome forks, like peeling skin that hasn’t used sunscreen but largely, she felt light, looked sharp and surprisingly familiar for something I hadn’t seen in over 15-years, let alone ridden.

D, my wife, asked me how I felt.

“Surprised” was my first reaction. Surprised by all the things that looked so familiar. Surprised by how well made this frame was. Surprised that is was exactly as I remembered it. And surprised by how strikingly modern she looked.

Looking at her, you have to credit and acknowledge the frame builder, Bryan Warnett, for his attention to detail, his engineering and above all his precise measurements.

35-years ago, the production of specialist road-bikes was a whole lot different to that of today. Then, each frame was tailored to suit. Each frame built to fit its rider perfectly, like a well-tailored Salvile-Row suit. Modern bikes have largely lost this connection. With a few exceptions, many are mass-produced in factories to generic plans. Bryan was different. His frames were so far removed from today’s approach, they are diametrically opposed yet, so, so similar.

The frame geometry is, as if it were from today’s vintage. But improved. The tolerances and clearances for the brakes and the wheels have millimetres to spare. This is no accident. This is engineering, precise engineering to be exact. That tailored approach that is missing from today.

I guess this puts Bryan in that special category of simply being ‘ahead of his time’. 35-years ahead.

The pieces are assembling and the project is now live, real and happening. I for one can’t wait for the restoration to be complete and the riding to begin.

This is one stunning road-frame and with the introduction of the finest Italian equipment of the era, ‘Campagnolo Super Record’ she will make one of the most stunning bikes on the road.

#30yearRecycle
 

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Facebook Posting #8

Some really cool news to share on the ‪#‎30yearRecycle‬ front. Pop over to the 30-yearRecycle page for more info @ https://www.facebook.com/pages/30-year- ... 3493016577

But in a nutshell ..... Adjustments are required to the Road-Frame, which is hard in this age of carbon fibre but there are still some really skilled operators out there and Jeff Anderson at Jefferson/Kiwibikes is the perfect man for the job @ http://www.kiwibikes.co.nz/about/staff/
Check out Jeff's passion for frame building in this magnificent short-video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ex-8-J3GYTw. I know that Bryan (Bryan Warnett the original frame-builder) would agree me and applaud my choice of working with Jeff.

#30yearRecycle is off and running and we will head into the workshop soon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ex-8-J3GYTw
 
I see you have updated the facebook page with the frame ready to be built up. You have done a really lovely job. It looks a lot better than the sorry rusty pictures in my garden.

So glad I found this thread and returned that lovely bike to you. Just image if it had been picked up and reduced to scrap.

Good luck with the build and please keep us updated with the pictures.
 
Yes you are dead right, I have finally got the frame finished. Apologies, I have been posting to FB on my 30YearRecycle Thread and it's taken me a few days to work out how to get back into Retrobike .... LOL ... As well as completing my original Bryan Warnett, I have also "recreated" a Bryan Warnett, I have taken a modern carbon frame and had it sprayed identically to the original one and equipped it with 2016 Campy Super Record so now, I will have a matching set 35-years apart .... Will post some pictures in a moment or two ...
 
OK, just become reacquainted with the challenges of posting pictures on here, all have to be done singularly and all less than 512KB, this could take a while !! I have a complete set from the refurb process which are all great to see .... BTW, I am off back to Wales this week to ride my "new" Bryan Warnett in the Welsh Road Champs ....
 
Here's a Taster of things to come ...
 

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