My (late) father owned this 1983 Shogun 400 bicycle that has been hanging in my Mom's basement unused for at least 20 years. On the 10th anniversary of his passing, I decided to bring it back to life.
It wasn't a prized possession of his, so there wasn't much guilt over bastardizing it into a singlespeed. I just figured it would be nice to get it back on the road again. Besides, it's a nice old lugged chromoly frame complete with what appears to be hand-painted factory pinstriping.
Here's how it looked upon arrival at my house. It hadn't seen daylight since the grunge era. :crazy:
There was a ton of mildew on it, as it had sat in a dark cellar for so long. I gave it a thorough cleaning first and then got to tearing it down.
Then I tore it down.
All I reused was the seatpost, bottom bracket and headset. The grease in the BB and headset was petrified. It had the consistency of wax and clearly wasn't going to do its job despite the low mileage on the bike. I re-packed them with fresh grease and moved on.
This was a low-budget build, so none of the stuff I used was all that impressive--just functional and decent.
Here it is about 75% mocked-up.
The wheels are Aeromax ebay specials. They were on my main road bike last season.
Tires are some entry-level Kendas that I got mainly for the color (blue and black). I'll probably get some wider cross tires for it for post-winter sanded roads. The frame has enough clearance for a 32C easily.
Cranks are cheap-o ebay specials. Alloy 175mm w/ 46T 3/32 ring
Brakes are Tektro 539AG long-reach calipers (for the 27" to 700c conversion) with nutted mounts because this frame doesn't have recessed mounting nuts.
Levers are Cane Creek TT levers
Pedals are some MKS platform pedals with clips and straps that I had hanging around.
Seat is an Origin 8 seat that I got off of Amazon for cheap.
The stem is a 100mm leftover from a road bike, attached with a quill-to-aheadset adapter.
I decided on bullhorn bars (also Origin 8) after watching footage of the final time trial in the 1989 Tour De France. They looked sweet on Laurent Fignon's bike, so that's what I wanted.
Bummer that I had to cover up the blue finish.
Bars all wrapped and cables run:
...and all built.
The rear wheel was a cassette freehub, so I used a Forte singlespeed conversion kit with a tensioner on it. I'm running a rear quick release (cranked down hard--don't worry) and the tensioner just makes life easier in terms of adjustment. 20T cog for 46x20 gearing. I'm a spinner, so I need a semi-wimpy gear for around my hilly neighborhood.
The Textro brakes are fantastic. They actually seem to clamp harder than the Ultegra calipers that are on my primary road bike. No joke. And yes--I left the big, clunky reflectors on because it'll see enough riding at dusk. I'll probably get a blinking LED for it, too, though.
...and a pic right before its maiden voyage. Please forgive my shadow.
The color scheme is probably a bit too hipsterish, but I like it (duh). Reminds me of a mid-80's BMX bike.
It rides GREAT. Nice and solid. I love the simplicity of it--like an overgrown BMX bike. That said, I probably won't do more than 10 miles at a time on it. It's more so I'll just hop on it for a couple of laps of my neighborhood without having to get all kitted-up in my cycling gear.
Hope you guys like it.