part 2 ---Stripping the second Peugeot

Eh? Is this thread a wind up? I don't see much here that'll need much more than grease and a bit of WD40.
 
Yardbent":1j3bgklz said:
mrcpea":1j3bgklz said:
How have you tried to remove the BB?
As for the bars, you could rough sand them and cover them in leather "almarc" style like I did
Rich :D :mrgreen:

'evening............
haven't tried the BB yet
the axle doesn't rotate ...next job

out on the Loire this afternoon - 36cm bars definitely feeling cramped
so I did up the 40cm Premiere ones to try
yours look very professional - i used a thick 'cork' tape - not fancy - but it provides cushioning for the Dupuytren's Contracture in my left hand
.
so BB fix tomorrow whilst waiting for the courier...............john
.

Hi again,
Sorry to hear of your hand problem, and yes the leather bar covering might be a bit thin for you then. Cork tape will be an excellent choice. :-)
 
mrcpea":1l4f4g9a said:
..................and yes the leather bar covering might be a bit thin for you then. Cork tape will be an excellent choice. :-)

and orange web tape to cover the rust............. :facepalm:
.
 
Jonny69":1tagu04w said:
Eh? Is this thread a wind up? I don't see much here that'll need much more than grease and a bit of WD40.

:lol:

** makes diary entry ''Do Not Buy a bike from this Member''.**
 
Lovely job on the bars if I may say so, nothing wrong with the orange tape either :-)
I'd struggle badly to tape bars that well!

I tell you..... You thing your Peugeot has seen better days! Well look at the bike I obtained a couple of weeks ago, and pay special attention to the wheels!

viewtopic.php?f=23&t=297092

Yours in Minty :shock:
I have now cut the cranks off as the cotter pins wouldn't move and drilling them did no better, so the angle grinder came out :mrgreen:
I thought the BB would be well seized in, but amazingly the thing undid by hand! AND the bearings are like new!
The paint is as hard a nails, so the circular wire brush attached to the grinder came in.
Anyway... Sorry to ramble and please follow my thread if you like. I will post an update on it withing a week or so when the paint is shifted from the frame completely!

Back to my original point, you have a lovely frame there my friend :D

Cheers

Richard
 
Yardbent":tfc293j3 said:
Jonny69":tfc293j3 said:
Eh? Is this thread a wind up? I don't see much here that'll need much more than grease and a bit of WD40.

:lol:

** makes diary entry ''Do Not Buy a bike from this Member''.**
You've made it out to be a big drama that a 30 year old bike has some rusty bits on the chrome and a few scabs on the frame. What did you expect when you bought/found it?
 
Jonny69":12qltmsp said:
You've made it out to be a big drama that a 30 year old bike has some rusty bits on the chrome and a few scabs on the frame. What did you expect when you bought/found it?

no big drama
just thought some may like to see what i have done

if you are not interested - don't read the thread - simple

and don't post again on my threads ... that drama enough for you
 
Re:

All restorations of vintage roadies are interesting, can't say I noticed any drama from the OP. Keep the updates coming, Yardbent!
 
mrcpea":1trs5qhz said:
................Back to my original point, you have a lovely frame there my friend :D ..Cheers.......Richard

thanks for the encouragement
BB wasn't seized - just solidified grease
I had to replaced 9 spokes in the 'vgc' wheels i bought on eBay
- seems he forgot to mention the chain had jumped into the spokes...... :facepalm:

anyway - finished and went for a small ride
perfect - well, nothing fell off
.
 
Re: Re:

Diamant_Don":2ztq5hk1 said:
............. Keep the updates coming, Yardbent!

thanks for the encouragement

anyway - finished and went for a small ride
not long enough to evaluate 'shed status''...... :wink:
but perfect - well, nothing fell off
.
 
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