You may remember my previous post after retrieving my Saluki ( Serial #007) 
from the powder coating shop in White River Jct Vt.   I thought the rebuild 
would be simple and straight forward.  What could go wrong?!!

First, I discovered that the threads in the BB shell needed to be 
re-chased.  This required 25 miles of driving (rt) to the Village Bicycle 
Shop in Richmond, Vt.  Home again things went well until I tried to. 
remount the rear fender.  Now realizing that all the eyelits also needed to 
be re-chased .  Another 25 miles of driving, only to discover  that a 
family emergency  had lead to an unscheduled closing.  Tried again the next 
day..  Along the way I recognized that the stem would not tighten down.  I 
figured out that the wedge shaped nut was disconnected from the long stem 
bolt, and jammed in the head tube..  This required removing the stem, HB, 
brakes,  fenders and fork in order drive the now deformed nut out of the 
head tube.  Had another in my spare parts bin.   OK.  Now with everything 
(almost) tightened down, I set out on a shakedown  ride. 

What a joy!  I didn't buy any new parts for this rebuild but am still 
leaning toward a new front rack.  Contrary to GPs opinions I really 
appreciate hi end Paul's breaks, TA rings, and Campy derailleurs and smooth 
shifting..  I rode along grooving on the sweet, neutral handling of the 
Saluki; the easy & comfy rolling of the PariMoto 45 mm tires.  No break 
squeak from my Pauls Neo Retros.  Then, about 6 miles from home all hell 
broke loose! 

Actually what broke was one tiny bolt holding the rear deraileur cage 
together.  That left me  without a pulley or functioning rear derailer. 
 Fortunately I was uphill from home so could coast  half the way home, 
where I discovered the remaining half of the deraileur (Campy Centaur) was 
wedged  between cogs in the cassette.  It turned out I had another Campy 
Centaur deraileur to use. Yea.

To deliver the coup, either in the process of wedging itself or my effort 
to free the derairller managed to damage the threads in the dropout and 
neither derailleur would rethread into the frame..  Another trip to a bike 
shop.

It turned out that the replacement derailleur also had a broken part, which 
is probably why it was in a box of random parts.  After some some despair, 
(and a drink) I found a way to combine the two broken derailleurs into one 
functioning part!

Tomorrow will try another ride.  It looks good.

Some pics: https://www.icloud.com/sharedalbum/#B0oGGXqixGEaeNt

I guess we all have days/weeks like this.
Michael

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW 
Owners Bunch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/fc43dac9-d939-4375-8715-56b2b28fb4d9n%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to