R J Quinn was a shop on Edge Lane in Liverpool. It's still there though with a slightly different name. My dad, from Liverpool, had an R J Quinn-framed road bike with very nice lugs and wrap over seat stays.
There's a little about it here: https://forum.cyclinguk.org/viewtopic.php?t=23399...
Looks like a great frame and project.
I've always liked the look of Shogun bikes but never had one. This thread inspired me to look into the history and frame number info available online. Sharing in case useful to anyone:
"Shogun serial # database? - Bike Forums"...
A few books that I had passed on to me, have enjoyed reading and would like someone else to appreciate. These *should* all fit into a box to post at just under 2kg, and happy to send for cost of postage. Cheers, Dave.
Lots of good advice in the comments. My 2p from doing similar kinds of distances would be...
Rear rack that puts the bags way back a good idea. I also like a front rack to balance things out. Not too bothered about the extra weight. Carradice are good panniers. And I like volume - half empty...
https://www.retrobike.co.uk/archive/1991-saracen-poster-catalogue.464/version/483/download?file=761326
Very nice!
Originally same colour forks? Looks like it.
Good luck. If you can post a close up photo of the hub and cassette/freewheel then it should be possible to say which one it is with a bit more certainty. I think they changed year on year. Think I've seen a 91 catalogue that suggests a Hyperglide 7 speed cassette but earlier ones will be different.
Yep. Worth reading this: "Traditional Thread-on Freewheels" https://www.sheldonbrown.com/freewheels.html
They can be hard to shift if seized on a bit. A long bar helps with leverage.
The whole thing is a joy -
" I went on a big bike ride once from Milan to Barcelona, 800 odd miles. Fun but a bit much really. Hot knees."
"There’s one guy work there who’s crazy - always kicking off about wrong junk in the wrong skip. He has to wear a body camera - all red in the face all...
Shimano UN55 are still available new e.g. at St John St Cycles in 115 and 127mm lengths (though I don't think they are still manufactured) and strike the price/durability/quality/weight balance well. Though I expect the Tange units and others are good too, I've just not tried them.