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For me it depends on the bike.
If it's rare or of nearly all known examples of its type are severely modified, I'd either take it to the next level (with modern parts) or go for nearly full factory spec.
The only areas where I'm likely to stray are the brake pads and tyres. Modern ones simply perform better and are more reliable than old ones, no matter how good the latter are preserved. Safety is simply too important to me.
For regular builds I tend to keep the groupset in the same league the frame. I'd never put XTR on a rubbish frame, or 100GS on a high-end one.
Mixing stuff ... well, that depends. I have an Altus A20 rear mech on a bike that's completely Altus A10 otherwise, but I have a NOS A10 one ready for when I decide to rebuild the bike again.
As for boutique parts, that alone is enough to turn me off completely. The sight of a Paul's part or similar just makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
I'd rather ride a complete wreck than anything that has a boutique part on it.
If it's rare or of nearly all known examples of its type are severely modified, I'd either take it to the next level (with modern parts) or go for nearly full factory spec.
The only areas where I'm likely to stray are the brake pads and tyres. Modern ones simply perform better and are more reliable than old ones, no matter how good the latter are preserved. Safety is simply too important to me.
For regular builds I tend to keep the groupset in the same league the frame. I'd never put XTR on a rubbish frame, or 100GS on a high-end one.
Mixing stuff ... well, that depends. I have an Altus A20 rear mech on a bike that's completely Altus A10 otherwise, but I have a NOS A10 one ready for when I decide to rebuild the bike again.
As for boutique parts, that alone is enough to turn me off completely. The sight of a Paul's part or similar just makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand up.
I'd rather ride a complete wreck than anything that has a boutique part on it.