Now I feel that maybe I was too harsh. The modern stuff will work much
better, with less fuss and screwing around, BUT I recognize that
making old French parts work on new bikes is a somewhat popular hobby
in certain cycling circles...

If a person wanted to do such a thing, I'd be fairly confident that a
5/6/7 sp freewheel/cassette in the vicinity of 13-27 and 39/52
chainrings would be OK.

Jim

On Jan 11, 12:21 am, "Jim Bronson" <jim.bron...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Oh good, I'm glad that I'm not the only one and thus coming off as a
> curmudgeon :-)
>
> There probably isn't a whole hill of beans in difference between parts
> made in 2002 and those made in 2009, but between parts made in 1980
> and parts made in this century, there is a huge difference :-)
>
> On Sun, Jan 11, 2009 at 12:17 AM, Jim Thill - Hiawatha Cyclery
>
>
>
> <thill....@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Hi John:
> > As much as I may admire French aesthetics, my advice would be to sell
> > the French parts for some insane amount of money and buy something
> > made more recently by Shimano. I'm sure the French stuff is pretty to
> > look at and cool/vintage, but you'll drive yourself nuts trying to
> > make it work with modern parts on a modern frame. And since you want
> > to do multi-day rides far from home, you may appreciate the fabulous
> > advances in derailleur technology over the past 20 or 30 years.
>
> > Funny, in researching the SLJ parts you mentioned, I came across a
> > blog that argues that the SLJ is "the best derailleur ever made". I
> > don't know how that blog author defines "best", but I'd eat my shoe if
> > it turned out that these French antiques shifted as well or stood up
> > to as much hard use/abuse as any of the current Shimano offerings.
>
> > On Jan 10, 11:35 pm, John Ferguson <rfj1...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> >> Hi all,
>
> >> First time on here, and it's my first time building a bike from the
> >> frame up. I'm hoping someone here can help, as I'm a complete
> >> neophyte. I've been riding an older (cheap) French bike for the past
> >> 10 years and finally took the plunge and bought a Rivendell Saluki.
> >> Frame only, of course--I could have taken the easy way out and gotten
> >> a completed bike, but since I'm going to be traveling long distances
> >> on this bike, I figured I needed to build it myself so I know how
> >> everything goes together.
>
> >> I'm in the process of acquiring components; I think I have most
> >> everything figured out, except for the following:
>
> >> I have a Simplex SLJ5500 rear derailleur and an SLJ front derailleur
> >> from my old bike. However, I can't figure out with a high degree of
> >> confidence what an appropriate range would be for the chainwheels and
> >> the cassette/freewheel. Unfortunately I sold my old bike without
> >> counting teeth.
>
> >> I'm planning on taking very long rides, sometimes multi-day, and I'm
> >> hoping to enter some formal randonneur events this year.
>
> >> Anyone have advice for me? Anything would be appreciated; I've spent
> >> many hours trying to figure this out.
>
> >> Thanks!
>
> >> John
>
> --
> having a blood clot is a sticky situation
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