Kona Caldera 1997

Re:

About time we had some build pictures I reckon. Once more, full kudos to the patience and help of Bromley Bike Company. We had a good play around measuring up and trying different crown braces on the Judy steerer. As mentioned, I've never had an issue with steerers and fittings with CK headsets until this one. It was a touch too slim meaning the brace would slide up too easily. However, we got a brace that fitted perfectly and was compatible with the headset and so we fitted it on the spot. Top chaps, top service.

Back in the cave I got busy with some careful application of super-glue to get the chain stay protector back in shape as it was peeling ever so slightly towards the drop-outs. There were a few little lifts on the fork decals that have been addressed. Also, I fixed the saddle where some of the kevlar has started to peel away at the rear.

The most fun concerned the ControlTech stem. As a few of you noticed and commented, whilst the yellow is excellent, it's a canary yellow as opposed to the mango yellow of the decals and fork. That close together, there was a clash.

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So whilst it was nice idea, it's not going to work. A quick dive into the spares box and I had two Tahoma Somme's to try out: the original full length one or a slightly shorter version in the gun metallic shade. I've gone with the latter as the reach will already be nearing the edge of comfort. In addition I can get one spacer in so even though there's a margin of difference, the angle is slightly higher but retains the look and feel I'm used to. Every little helps and I'm confident the controls will be in easy reach.

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Everything else came together smoothly. With the time left I took a pause to the last jobs of cabling up, chain and the inevitable fiddling and tuning: my least favourite jobs!

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I'm trying to be really objective here (!): I think this looks like it'll eat hills for breakfast. The combination of slim stays, simple and effective geometry alongside it's light-weight but purposeful set of components i.e. M739 is bomb-proof in my experience, ticks all of my boxes. Whilst the saddle colour isn't mango, the fact it's at the rear and not clashing with the mango shade means it suits the look. I do have a pair of NOS yellow Onza grips but I have a feeling these won't be suitable for the same front colour clash reasons.

I should have some time this weekend to get her finished, ready for a spring shake-down ride (if it turns up) in the not too distant future.
 
Re: Kona Caldera 1997 - unicorn scenes

Definitely the right call on the stem. It's something I wouldn't criticise on someone else's bike, but it would bug me. The gunmetal replacement looks great.

I also agree that the saddle is much less of an issue, being further from the decals and forks.
 
Re: Kona Caldera 1997 - unicorn scenes

I had 30 minutes to kill yesterday so I sorted out the brakes. All tuned and ready to go, nice to use proper NOS ones for a change. It saves on the cleaning and polishing!

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Re: Kona Caldera 1997 - unicorn scenes

This all looks just awsome!
I think skinwalls would look nice on it! Have considered something like that?
 
Re: Kona Caldera 1997 - unicorn scenes

Dare":2ald6b09 said:
This all looks just awsome!
I think skinwalls would look nice on it! Have considered something like that?

Cheers!

I haven't because I really, really, really don't like skinwalls.
 
Re: Kona Caldera 1997 - unicorn scenes

al-onestare":4pqiqypd said:
Dare":4pqiqypd said:
This all looks just awsome!
I think skinwalls would look nice on it! Have considered something like that?

Cheers!

I haven't because I really, really, really don't like skinwalls.


by 1997/1998 they were also deeply, deeply unfashionable.
 
Re: Kona Caldera 1997 - unicorn scenes

I like skinwalls, even on my "modern" bike. However, it is the thing of taste and therefore it is pointless to discuss about it.

Al has great bike here and I am sure I am gonna love the way it looks with or without skinwalls.
 
Re:

Skinwalls are a thing of the past, yet they are in some form reappearing just like vinyl now beats cd's (but not digital streaming).

I was surprised to see ProTour teams use Vittoria's last year, and there have been a few attempts in mob too.

In my experience skinwalls can really shift the overall balance from a mere cold appearance to a warmer more coherent whole; especially when it comes to titanium frames. I expect the same effect to some degree with bare aluminum frames.

K.
 
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