Hi all,
Long post alert!
I've got a lovely Olmo Competition from the late eighties. Columbus SL tubing with beautiful lugs, and it came with a Shimano Ultegra 600 groupset. It's seen a lot of use and it's time to get it looking good again, and protect it so it'll see another 3 decades
The chrome has done well to protect the steel, but frame and forks have begun to rust. Ideally, I'd like to strip away the paint and rust, rechrome it (fully this time rather than from behind the downtube back) and respray. I've already got replacement decals.
To make sure that it's done right and i don't waste time & money, I've a few questions before I embark on the strip down and restoration. I appreciate any info that anyone has:
1) The frame is definitely Olmo as it has pantographing and Olmo lugwork. I bought the bike secondhand in 1990 so I'm not sure about the forks. The forks are chromed, have nice lugwork and had Columbus decals, but are not pantographed. In common with my frame, they have no mudguard eyelets. Most of the Olmo forks that I've seen have either the Olympic Star or signature Olmo pantographed into them. I've seen a couple of Olmo bikes with Chrome forks and no pantographing, but I don't know if those forks were genuine either. Does anyone know if Olmo made bikes with non-pantographed forks in the late 1980's? Also, I like the pantographed look, so if anyone has Olmo chromed pantographed forks from that period, I'd be interested in buying them (if the headset size matches).
2) The top tube has had a small dent in the side for years. Is there any way of removing the dent prior to strip down and rechroming? If not, it's small enough that I think I could fill it in unobtrusively.
3) What's the best way to strip off paint & rust and then fill in any resulting pock marks prior to rechroming? The existing good chrome doesn't all need to go, just the paint & rust. I don't know if a chemical dip, some kind of blasting, or manual sanding is best for removal, or if any of these are a definite no-no for these frames. Then I'd need a filler that can take a chrome layer on top. Alternatively, if anyone here on RetroBikes does this work or knows of any companies that do this work well, please let me know.
4) I'm missing a small metal cable guide under the bottom bracket that was probably brazed onto the frame there. It's a simple small cube shape with a hole through it (less than 5mm/side). If anyone knows of anywhere that sells these, or replaces these, please reply too.
5) Lastly - for anyone who has done this - is restoring this a bit nuts? Will it just end up costing a lot more than the bike is worth and not end up as good as the original anway?! Should I just keep going on it as is until the frame breaks (I hope not :cry: )?
Thanks and Best Regards,
ConorD
Long post alert!
I've got a lovely Olmo Competition from the late eighties. Columbus SL tubing with beautiful lugs, and it came with a Shimano Ultegra 600 groupset. It's seen a lot of use and it's time to get it looking good again, and protect it so it'll see another 3 decades
The chrome has done well to protect the steel, but frame and forks have begun to rust. Ideally, I'd like to strip away the paint and rust, rechrome it (fully this time rather than from behind the downtube back) and respray. I've already got replacement decals.
To make sure that it's done right and i don't waste time & money, I've a few questions before I embark on the strip down and restoration. I appreciate any info that anyone has:
1) The frame is definitely Olmo as it has pantographing and Olmo lugwork. I bought the bike secondhand in 1990 so I'm not sure about the forks. The forks are chromed, have nice lugwork and had Columbus decals, but are not pantographed. In common with my frame, they have no mudguard eyelets. Most of the Olmo forks that I've seen have either the Olympic Star or signature Olmo pantographed into them. I've seen a couple of Olmo bikes with Chrome forks and no pantographing, but I don't know if those forks were genuine either. Does anyone know if Olmo made bikes with non-pantographed forks in the late 1980's? Also, I like the pantographed look, so if anyone has Olmo chromed pantographed forks from that period, I'd be interested in buying them (if the headset size matches).
2) The top tube has had a small dent in the side for years. Is there any way of removing the dent prior to strip down and rechroming? If not, it's small enough that I think I could fill it in unobtrusively.
3) What's the best way to strip off paint & rust and then fill in any resulting pock marks prior to rechroming? The existing good chrome doesn't all need to go, just the paint & rust. I don't know if a chemical dip, some kind of blasting, or manual sanding is best for removal, or if any of these are a definite no-no for these frames. Then I'd need a filler that can take a chrome layer on top. Alternatively, if anyone here on RetroBikes does this work or knows of any companies that do this work well, please let me know.
4) I'm missing a small metal cable guide under the bottom bracket that was probably brazed onto the frame there. It's a simple small cube shape with a hole through it (less than 5mm/side). If anyone knows of anywhere that sells these, or replaces these, please reply too.
5) Lastly - for anyone who has done this - is restoring this a bit nuts? Will it just end up costing a lot more than the bike is worth and not end up as good as the original anway?! Should I just keep going on it as is until the frame breaks (I hope not :cry: )?
Thanks and Best Regards,
ConorD