Lightest Steel Frame?

I have weighed a 56cm lee cooper built 853 frame at 1.330 kg and 708 fork at 1.05 kg making that frame set under 2.4 kg . This is lighter than the all 753 sbdu frame I also built up this year.
For the absolute lightest Reynolds I believe 931 and 953 allow frame builders to go lighter still, however they are effectively unobtainium like the 853 pro T that was once used by pro teams. Like the posters in this thread, I have heard that Columbus record and various ishiwata tubes enable similarly light results but I would not count them as being mainstream available either. For us mortals I think Columbus and Reynolds are about as exotic as it gets and a huge step up from the average cromoly frame. I would say that the lugs and dropouts in the early 80s frames I mention above were filed right down by the frame builders and that has had as much of a weight reducing effect as the exotic tubes ( plus makes the whole frame look much more elegant) but I doubt they would meet modern standards of durability as a result.
 
🤔 Personally think the weights from around the 50s are surprisingly daft light. Actual weight (what it includes / excludes) and published weights of complete bikes will be down to a bit of debate. Wished I weighed my own frame set to get a concrete number.

Back on the earlier posted Alex Singer - 7.9 kg, and note the 4/10 - that is the tubing wall thickness. It is stupidly daft thin and combined with skinny diameters it would make for a very light bike.

The wall thickness actually comes up the average same as the 753 track tubing according to this article - which is mental for something to go touring on.

View attachment 900480

Said it before, such a period with everything whittled away to almost nothing and riding on a wing and prayer was the way. It was the cutting edge of bicycle technology. Also posted this a while ago - from 1947.

View attachment 900484

It doesn't leave much to the imagination looking at the uber thin stays, etc. and a smattering of AL anorexia all over the place (usually undersized 😁 o_O:LOL: ) and moreover the physical volume of the parts isn't much at all. Most likely even the steel stuff would be drilled / hollowed / sculpted out where it could. Hell even some of the brake cables are more like todays gear cables :cool:

Alex Singer is stating this is 11.7 kg today. No doubt it is a much more robust bicycle but heavier than what would have entered very competitive bike trade shows etc. from more than 70 years ago.

https://www.cycles-alex-singer.fr/catalogue/randonneur-sportif.html
To be fair it is more like self supported ultra long distance riding than touring. These were purpose built, no jack of all trades touring bikes.
 
Go too light with steel though and the ride gets noodly, unless you're a whippet.

Have vague memories when the Columbians entered the racing scene in the 80s. I'm sure I've seen a whippet like Luis Herrera who probably lived off coffee and fags like a ballet dancer (big front dinner plate man still) actually undo is rear brake quick release when climbing to stop the brake pads rubbing on the rim.

Sadly for him, he was no real descender, and would "block-up". In retrospective it would be interesting to know if the bike actually tracked well descending.

What goes up, must come down. Two very different criteria for the bike designer and frame builder.
 
To be fair it is more like self supported ultra long distance riding than touring. These were purpose built, no jack of all trades touring bikes.

👍 What I find interesting, it's like the mudguard is supporting the weight of the (little) load. It almost feels like a distribution of load and weight where those skinny stays could only support a rider weight properly and no more.

BTW: On the above example, they are rare Mavic mudguards. 😍 I understand that Mavic weren't that bad at early AL stuff.
 
👍 What I find interesting, it's like the mudguard is supporting the weight of the (little) load. It almost feels like a distribution of load and weight where those skinny stays could only support a rider weight properly and no more.

BTW: On the above example, they are rare Mavic mudguards. 😍 I understand that Mavic weren't that bad at early AL stuff.
I think Velo Orange have or used to have a little carrier that fixes unto the metal mudguards. Very elegant solution. Hebie make something comparable, which I always think I should buy, just because I like the look.

791_Wingee_1.jpg
 
The 853 lemond frame has been purloined by my wife, she knows a good thing when she sees it... I've given it a whirl around the lanes even though it's too small, you can tell it's stiff and very responsive. With the right stuff on it you could easily get it down to fifteen pounds plus. It's fillet brazed which I suppose saves a bit of weight, but when you pick up the bare frame everything in your head is going ' I can't believe it's not carbon" I once had an Ellis Briggs which was silver soldered 653 and that was incredibly light.

Always had a soft spot for 653, a very much overlooked tube set.
 
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