That would be a fun project for sureC.H White sell a Dahon Speed Pro/TT Frame Cro-mo Steel Mango (Ahead type) frame with 135mm spacing for £100, if anyone fancied starting from scratch.
I've read in a lot of forum that dahon rear dropout is very ofte 133 mm. Some people converted a dahon and reported a rear dropout of 133 mm. Has that changed since?The fork dropout on the modern Dahons are all 80mm (the wheels in the pic have a respaced Brompton hub), although I've changed one custom Dahon to 100mm spaced carbon fork.
Alan
I've not met many, if any, Dahon frames where the dropout is actually the correct standard width, usually a mm or 2 under, but this applies to a lot of frames - some under, some over.I've read in a lot of forum that dahon rear dropout is very ofte 133 mm. Some people converted a dahon and reported a rear dropout of 133 mm. Has that changed since?
That's really cheap compared to the cost of a fully-built one. I rather like the look of that bike too and its very light. Does make a lot of sense starting from scratch I plan to remove many parts and change the wheels, tyres and probably remove gears anyway if I buy a ready built.C.H White sell a Dahon Speed Pro/TT Frame Cro-mo Steel Mango (Ahead type) frame with 135mm spacing for £100, if anyone fancied starting from scratch.
I bought a mid-range Oyama in a CR sale for my son's girlfriend. It was heavy, with a lot of rather basic steel parts, including what looked and felt like a cast iron left crank. I replaced the front wheel and rebuilt the rear one, plus quite a few other bits of sorting out.What's the vibe with Oyama? I know they're a Taiwanese outfit but the bikes look like a budget price alternative to Dahon and compare favourably on weight?
I had the exact same issue with gearing on my 26" folder which was 21-spd. I ended up taking it down to 6-spd and moving the chain so now it's highly geared in 6th gear and gears cant be changed! It's the ONLY way I can pedal and keep up with the motor on full power which is where I prefer to leave it. Maybe I'm lazy and should start putting more effort in, or perhaps I'm just a speed freak. I do always seem to be in a rush to get somewhere. I can comfortably maintain 15mph without effort and pedaling hard gets me to around 20mph.Morphix I have a 20in. wheeled Folding Batribike which is too low geared , I presume to make it easier to ride home without power when the battery fails . It is certainly not fast , on medium assist which I mainly use , I only manage to put 10 miles into every hour , riding at a comfortable pace .If I use maximum assist and pedal like mad , I can just about reach 15 mph , but can`t keep it up for long . It may be my age at 73, as over 50 years ago my single speed Hercules easily did 12 miles in the hour . I`m pretty sure my 20 year old GT Talera Mountain bike will cover 15 miles in the hour now .Trouble is since getting the Ebike I haven`t ridden it to find out ! I also have a 32 year old German Folder and Jerry your worry on the hard ride isn`t bourne out as the U frame is quite springy .This machine has no suspension and is all steel and heavy .
Going back to the Batribike Folder , the Agent at Malmesbury was altering the gearing of this machine to overcome the low gearing issue and charging £100 extra for the revised machine .This was 18 months ago when I bought mine .
Hi Jerry,I think for the money a Moulton TSR offers a better buy starting at around £950 complete with belt drive. Its sprung both ends, is more portable and the ones with more gears make great tourers.
As a follow-up to this, if anyone is interested.. Downtube's the UK distributor does have the above bikes but they seem to be an older (previous year) model with chrome stem and handlebar instead of the black pictured, (unless their website needs updating) although I haven't been able to confirm this, as they don't answer any messages or e-mails.Those Downtube bikes look nice and light and the addition of suspension is a plus. Reasonably priced, but sadly no proper dealers in UK and shipping direct from US is prohibitively expensive.
Basic model without suspension (10.8kg), a merely $300 in choice of colours:
Full-suspension model £444 8-spd derailleur or £500 8-spd hub (12.5kg) available from their sole UK dealer (been showing as awaiting stock for months and months, e-mails go unanswered):
Shame there aren't more dealers for these bikes. I had a quote on shipping from the manufacturer in States and they quoted me the same cost as the bike just for shipping! Plus VAT and Duty to be added onto that of course. Does anyone know a cheaper way of shipping them?
Thanks Alan. I post on the folding bike forum and have read alot of Bruce's excellent write ups there.For Jerry and anyone else interested in Dahon Uno/Moulton/belt drive/Automatix hubs - this is a link to Bruce Metras, generally regarded as the guru and skilled modifier of these items
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