I ride an early 80's Raleigh Criterium Triathlon and it is completely standard. It does everything I want it to, or at least I thought it did.
My son has a 97 Cannondale CAAD3 R600 with a few none standard parts such as Miche RX5 wheels.
Well I rode the Cannondale myself for the first time last weekend and I was very shocked at just how much easier it was to ride.
Extremely easy and smooth to get up to high speed. I found my self doing 29.5MPH without really trying. The best I have done on the old Raleigh and been Just over 26MPH and that was pushing it.
That got me thinking, if a bike which is around 15 years younger is that much easier to ride how easy would one of today's good bike be to ride?
My son barely uses the canonndale now and it is a little too small for me to be comfortable on for any distance so I decided to switch the wheels over to my old Raleigh.
I was surprised that the Miche rear wheel went straight on the Raleigh and the old Raleigh Rear mech worked a treat on the 8 speed block with some minor adjustment. I was also shocked that the chain wasn't jumping any teeth.
Any way, I went out today on the old Raleigh with the Miche wheels on I couldn't believe how much difference it made. Everything felt much smoother and so much easier to ride.
So I find myself thinking of swapping more bits over such as the brakes and mechs and the aero shifters. Doing this lets me keep the character of an old retro bike with the upgraded ease of riding a newer bike.
I know the purists won't like it and I was determined to keep the Raleigh as standard as possible but having tasted the ease of riding I feel it will be beneficial.
Has anyone else done this sort of thing with their retro bike and what were your finding?
Also how do todays offerings compare with yesteryears? Is the difference huge and are they worth the expense?
My son has a 97 Cannondale CAAD3 R600 with a few none standard parts such as Miche RX5 wheels.
Well I rode the Cannondale myself for the first time last weekend and I was very shocked at just how much easier it was to ride.
Extremely easy and smooth to get up to high speed. I found my self doing 29.5MPH without really trying. The best I have done on the old Raleigh and been Just over 26MPH and that was pushing it.
That got me thinking, if a bike which is around 15 years younger is that much easier to ride how easy would one of today's good bike be to ride?
My son barely uses the canonndale now and it is a little too small for me to be comfortable on for any distance so I decided to switch the wheels over to my old Raleigh.
I was surprised that the Miche rear wheel went straight on the Raleigh and the old Raleigh Rear mech worked a treat on the 8 speed block with some minor adjustment. I was also shocked that the chain wasn't jumping any teeth.
Any way, I went out today on the old Raleigh with the Miche wheels on I couldn't believe how much difference it made. Everything felt much smoother and so much easier to ride.
So I find myself thinking of swapping more bits over such as the brakes and mechs and the aero shifters. Doing this lets me keep the character of an old retro bike with the upgraded ease of riding a newer bike.
I know the purists won't like it and I was determined to keep the Raleigh as standard as possible but having tasted the ease of riding I feel it will be beneficial.
Has anyone else done this sort of thing with their retro bike and what were your finding?
Also how do todays offerings compare with yesteryears? Is the difference huge and are they worth the expense?