My father-in-law grew up in Liverpool and was the proud owner of a Harry Quinn in his early years. Late in life, he managed to acquire a Harry Quinn bike through a friend at Church. This, in turn, made it's way to me. The bike has been in a box in my garage for a couple of years and I finally unpacked it. I've heard plenty of stories about the Harry Quinn name being used on non-Quinn bikes, but this one is a little strange.
Firstly, it seems to be an early '60's touring frame (I don't have a history of vintage bikes so am happy to be corrected). The lugs look good and the detailing was obviously nice when new. It's an orange frame with a gold 'detail' round the lugs. Groupset is mostly campag (gran sport rear mech but possibly record cranks with the 5-arms?). Brakes seem to be the first generation weinmann 999 centre pull. Dropouts are campag. Bars are alloy cresta, stem is an "Il Primo Milano". Rims are lightweight alloy and seem made for sew-ups and hubs are also Campag large flange. All good.
However, the challenge is in 2 areas. Firstly, the down tube decals are different to any I've seen in pictures for a Quinn (it looks like it said something like "Hand built in Liverpool" under the name). Head tube decal seems consistent with early Quinns made in Walton Road. Secondly, as you can see from the BB Shell, there is no frame number. There's an oval stamp on the upper side of the BB shell which reads something like "BGF" but is hard to read.
The bike is in pretty poor condition in places and would need a lot of restoring to be rideable again. If this genuinely is a Quinn then I'll be tempted to treat it to some care and restoration. If not, I'll probably hang it on the wall and just admire it "as-is" as it's still a nice looking bike with the chromed forks / stays.
All thoughts appreciated.
Richard
Firstly, it seems to be an early '60's touring frame (I don't have a history of vintage bikes so am happy to be corrected). The lugs look good and the detailing was obviously nice when new. It's an orange frame with a gold 'detail' round the lugs. Groupset is mostly campag (gran sport rear mech but possibly record cranks with the 5-arms?). Brakes seem to be the first generation weinmann 999 centre pull. Dropouts are campag. Bars are alloy cresta, stem is an "Il Primo Milano". Rims are lightweight alloy and seem made for sew-ups and hubs are also Campag large flange. All good.
However, the challenge is in 2 areas. Firstly, the down tube decals are different to any I've seen in pictures for a Quinn (it looks like it said something like "Hand built in Liverpool" under the name). Head tube decal seems consistent with early Quinns made in Walton Road. Secondly, as you can see from the BB Shell, there is no frame number. There's an oval stamp on the upper side of the BB shell which reads something like "BGF" but is hard to read.
The bike is in pretty poor condition in places and would need a lot of restoring to be rideable again. If this genuinely is a Quinn then I'll be tempted to treat it to some care and restoration. If not, I'll probably hang it on the wall and just admire it "as-is" as it's still a nice looking bike with the chromed forks / stays.
All thoughts appreciated.
Richard