torqueless
Senior Retro Guru
Re:
dwscrimshaw, every time I see one of your plots I am asked to accept that (0)34264 is about two or three years older than I thought it to be, so much so that I am inclined to throw in the towel. I admit that I don't have much to support my assessment beyond a pair of 17" chainstays. The scans at kilgariff tell me that in '76, Specials had a "16.75 inch rear triangle." In '83, this had changed to 16.5 inch chainstays. In '85, it was 17 inch chainstays. (no information for any other years.)
Earlier today I pulled my stem and found an '82 date code, (which doesn't necessarily denote an '82 frame, but if original, gives a 'not before' date.) I have no way of knowing if the stem is original to the frame, but equally there is no particular reason to think it is not. Believe me, I am not psychologically invested in owning a late 1983/1984 Holdsworth- I would actually prefer it to be an '81... I just don't believe that it is.
It's a shame that this thread seems to have encouraged so few to enlarge your data pool. The bikes are out there, (thousands!) but many people are defensive about their serial numbers, and you'd need a king-size gab-gift to charm strangers with Holdsworths into revealing them.
CBguy, Yeah the Claud Butlers.. A sensible suggestion. I heard that Holdsworthy actually produced more Clauds than Holdsworths..
dwscrimshaw, every time I see one of your plots I am asked to accept that (0)34264 is about two or three years older than I thought it to be, so much so that I am inclined to throw in the towel. I admit that I don't have much to support my assessment beyond a pair of 17" chainstays. The scans at kilgariff tell me that in '76, Specials had a "16.75 inch rear triangle." In '83, this had changed to 16.5 inch chainstays. In '85, it was 17 inch chainstays. (no information for any other years.)
Earlier today I pulled my stem and found an '82 date code, (which doesn't necessarily denote an '82 frame, but if original, gives a 'not before' date.) I have no way of knowing if the stem is original to the frame, but equally there is no particular reason to think it is not. Believe me, I am not psychologically invested in owning a late 1983/1984 Holdsworth- I would actually prefer it to be an '81... I just don't believe that it is.
It's a shame that this thread seems to have encouraged so few to enlarge your data pool. The bikes are out there, (thousands!) but many people are defensive about their serial numbers, and you'd need a king-size gab-gift to charm strangers with Holdsworths into revealing them.
CBguy, Yeah the Claud Butlers.. A sensible suggestion. I heard that Holdsworthy actually produced more Clauds than Holdsworths..