LongLegsRetro
Dirt Disciple
I acquired a rather tired Concorde Mistral some time ago from a Belgium guy who had brought his large collection of cycles over with him and was having a clear out.
The plan loosely being, rescue it, or if not viable, strip it down and sell it on as parts. It looked more a collection of parts, rather than a complete bike and had lost its original Concorde chromed forks.
Having striped it down, it became apparent that the replacement fork didn't fit the frame, the steerer tube being too short by about 10mm and some of the components were beyond saving.
So, undecided what to do with the parts that were salvageable and the frame it's self, I set about degreasing the frame and cleaning it up.
The frame cleaned up well, the blue paint and graphics have faded in places over the years, and there are rust spots on the chrome, but I think that's all reasonable and honest patina for its age. A bit of work with some paint renovator and wax should improve things.
The plan loosely being, rescue it, or if not viable, strip it down and sell it on as parts. It looked more a collection of parts, rather than a complete bike and had lost its original Concorde chromed forks.
Having striped it down, it became apparent that the replacement fork didn't fit the frame, the steerer tube being too short by about 10mm and some of the components were beyond saving.
So, undecided what to do with the parts that were salvageable and the frame it's self, I set about degreasing the frame and cleaning it up.
The frame cleaned up well, the blue paint and graphics have faded in places over the years, and there are rust spots on the chrome, but I think that's all reasonable and honest patina for its age. A bit of work with some paint renovator and wax should improve things.