Spooky Bandwagon Build

sectionate

Old School Hero
Where to start with this build?

As a teen I ran an original 24-7 dark angel jump bike (number 099), and my brother ran a Spooky Metalhead, both of us had the fork of the day, Marzocchi Z1s. We also had a DMR trailstar and a Kona Cindercone before they were stolen, and a childhood friend had an Azonic DS-1 with a pair of 97 Z1s. Riding, building trails and dirt parks was a way of life, until we went to university and other things became a priority.

In a moment of mid life wondering when my father was critically ill, I ended up on eBay and found myself bidding on an Azonic DS-1 frame, a pair of Z1 forks and a few other bits and bobs.

The one thing I have maintained is that cranksets from the late 90s were made of cheese, and I wouldn't be putting them on my bike so I ended up with a set of Shimano Zee cranks. I never liked the DS-1 as the top tube was too short for my frame and it made it uncomfortable to ride.

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At the start of lockdown I was talking to my brother and he mentioned that he had picked up a Spooky Bandwagon frame a few years back for the princely sum of £80 at a hospice sale! He wasn't ever going to build it up into something, so he gifted it to me and I transferred over all my components from my Azonic.

The frame in question and the Z1s I picked up cheaply and refurbished myself:

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The completed bike on it's maiden voyage.

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After the first few rides, I remembered how under powered rim brakes were and I could never get the XTR rear Vee I have perfectly dialled in. I asked about on here if anyone had an original brake mount that I could copy and add a rear disc brake. It became apparent that this was going to be a fruitless endeavour, and after talking to another member (Hi Coreygun) and as an engineer I decided to design my own. Frank the Welder even sent me a concept he had come up with. I fired up CAD and got drawing. A few trials and errors later, had something that works (It needs a single modification to be perfect).

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Hand fabricated version as a proof of concept

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The CNC machined version

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The next problem was a rear wheel, I didn't own a disc version and eBay was coming up short. So I picked up the parts and quickly discovered that every local bike shop's workshop were busy, found a matching rim to the front and decided to build my own. I don't own a truing frame, but an old frame I suddenly had surplus to requirements and a ruler and some squares made for a good substitute.

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The Bandwagon on its first ride with a rear disc brake, it works so well. I plan to make a slight change so that the horizontal alignment can be made perfect.

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The rear disc calliper, snugly sited in the rear stays like the original version.

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It's a great bike to ride, handles the trails around Surrey beautifully .

Frame: Spooky Bandwagon
Fork: Marzocchi 97 Z1
Drivetrain: Shimano Zee 10 Speed / 36t (like the old days when I removed the large/small rings from my cranks!
Pedals: DMR V12
Brakeset: Hope Mini Mono (183 / 165)
Handlebar & Stem: Azonic Worldforce
Headset: FSA Thing
Grips: Whatever I picked up cheaply when I built the Azonic
Rims / Hubs: Mavic EN 321 & Hope XC Disc Hubs
Tyres: Tioga DH Front / Maxxis Ardent (the Tioga DH 2.3 I had didn't fit the frame)
Saddle Something Comfy as the old Tioga Saddle was like sitting on a brick

:D
 
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Looks awesome, that frame and fork combo is just spot on it has aged really well. love the makeshift trueing stand. Can I ask why the 165 disc. Is that not a mono mini? Surly it should be a 160? And what mount are you using on the front?
 
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Timoth27":kt9wnxdn said:
Looks awesome, that frame and fork combo is just spot on it has aged really well. love the makeshift trueing stand. Can I ask why the 165 disc. Is that not a mono mini? Surly it should be a 160? And what mount are you using on the front?

Thanks, the truing stand worked surprisingly well! The bike has turned out beautifully. If I feel like slashing the cash, I want to get the pedals sprayed the same colour as the forks lol

When I checked the Hope website for calliper number / rotor size it said that a 165 disc was required for a mono mini. I did think about modifying the mount to take a 160, but decided against it.

I have a IS mount on the front, with mono mini and 185 disc.
 
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sectionate":8z9r6li0 said:
Thanks, the truing stand worked surprisingly well! The bike has turned out beautifully. If I feel like slashing the cash, I want to get the pedals sprayed the same colour as the forks lol

When I checked the Hope website for calliper number / rotor size it said that a 165 disc was required for a mono mini. I did think about modifying the mount to take a 160, but decided against it.

I have a IS mount on the front, with mono mini and 185 disc.

Where did you sort the front mount as they seem pretty elusive at moment?

That’s strange as it says here

https://www.hopetech.com/_repository/1/ ... -chart.pdf

It should be a 160?

I mean you have obviously got it working fine, I would just check the pads are not hanging below the braking surface of the rotor. Otherwise they could wear the legs (sorry don’t know what to call that bit) if the rotor which could compromise the rotor eventually. That goes for the front too.

Sorry if it sounds like I’m telling you to suck eggs (I’m really not) it’s just a couple of times I’ve accidentally fitted a xx5mm rotor in a mono (black and gold) caliper they have rubbed the top of the caliper.
 
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Ah sorry I should have looked a bit closer at your forks, the 96 forks of the same colour had a slightly different (formula) mount and that’s what I was referring to.
 
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Looks great - love the little Azonic too :cool: I have owned a couple of Bandwagons in the past - never managed to fit a rear disc though.
 
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mamadirt":1goluze2 said:
Looks great - love the little Azonic too :cool: I have owned a couple of Bandwagons in the past - never managed to fit a rear disc though.

Thanks, they are both good looking bikes!

Well, if you want to be able to fit a hope mini-mono number 3 calliper to the rear, we can get another mount machined!
 
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