Hi RJ. After riding for 3 years, I decided to do a covid project and build myself a fixed gear bike. I picked all the parts, got the tools, and assembled the whole thing myself. Not gonna lie...your videos were used as references many times. Thanks for all your help!
@Bill Bradford guess what, bill noone gives a shit about the french. noone likes the french and the french like noone. Their cars are absolute shit. learning the french language is a waste of your time, as it is only useful in a tiny, rotten place. But hey, they know how to protest, they make great wine and don't skimp on the butter, so I'll give them a pass.
Hey RJ, love your channel and the content you put out. Very informative and a fair amount of hidden knowledge gems, which we all need now and then. I have a 2010 XL Specialized Allez Frame and fork I am willing to donate to you, but you might have to meet me half way on the shipping as I'm in the UK
Oh I would notice that split alright, when the rear triangle collapses, probably at the stop lights, at rush hour, when 100's of people are round to point and laugh at me. OR after i'd ordered $100's worth of parts to fix it up.
I wouldn’t have spotted the split until strip down and clean. I buy lots of old bikes and it’s always a gamble. Thanks for your videos RJ, they are really valuable and appreciated to us other guys that also work on old bikes.
I've fixed a chain stay split on a bike I liked. Hammer down the bulge, grind off rust. Cut a small section of steel tubing. Shape the patch to fit. Clamp and flux wire weld it on. Clean up imperfections with angle grinder and apply paint. Not as good as new but stronger!
Never saw it where i live, here, and it’s pretty cold. Northwestern America (and Canada) seem to be totally on another level when it comes to winter, subzero temperatures and snow blizzards.
I popped to see my daughter and a nieghour had left outside a dawes galaxy al I said could I have it they said yea fine take it. I looked at it it had 26 inch mtb wheels on it probably why it couldn't be ridden. Anyway I found another free dawes that had the correct wheels but the rest was a rusty pile. Swapped wheels over the gears shift fine so been really lucky the only think I have to buy is a saddle and post. I love my crusty bike tho dunno why just nice to get something broken and fixed for next to nothing. Great vid.
Thanks for sharing your buy, inspection and result you came away with. No better way to cycle than on a recycled bicycle, or maybe not so in this case. Im sure we will see the parts put to good use though. All the best Andy
the cost of someone who has enough skill to restore it correctly.. could be spent of a different frame. really it would be better to cut the chain stay off and have a new tube welded that has the correct shape but it would need to be fully jigged up and painted afterwards and..well why. unless it was to preserve a rare iconic frame the time and effort would be orders of magnitude over what the bike would be worth.
@@bretmohler9719 any competent weld shop could do this quickly and easily...yes...you would need to do some prep work, but...its a steel frame...no complicated process, and negligent frame warp...easy peasy...heck, I could do it in my garage
There are so many older Shimano brifters out there like that could be put back into service, because they're very robustly designed. Unfortunately replacement hoods aren't made past a couple generations, so these shifters ultimately become paperweights when the hoods wear out... Seems like such a waste.
Good vid RJ. Nice catch on that seat post. Looks like someone added a shim made of a piece of soda can to make that post tight enough. Possibly a 26.8 post in a 27.2 seat tube. Too bad about the frame. Those older steel Allez models are nice rides. This one, with the longer wheelbase and rear eyelets would have made a good around town bike.
Haven't watched past 0:07. Here goes: - Possible 39/54t chainring combo on an older 110bcd crank, so chainline/chainring clearance is suspect - Possible stiff links in that rusted chain, skipping a possibility - Possibly broken Shimano Light Action rear derailer - That era of Shimano 600 brifters - guaranteed to be gummed up and take weeks of degreaser and clicking to unstick - Someone liked REALLY SHORT cable housing when they built this thing. In fact, stupidly short. - A couple of obvious pad marks on the rear rim, yet only in one place. Truing issue?
Wheel it on into my shop buddy. Spoke Replacement: $25 Tire/Tube Install: $15 Chain Install: $10 Bar Tape Wrap: $15 True Front: $15 Shifter Flush: $10 Frame Repair: Free inside the dumpster out back.
The chain and rear wheel would have got my alarm bells going, RJ and I'd have been really thorough with further inspection. Still, fifty bucks for the spares salvaged seems to be reasonable.
@@RJTheBikeGuy scrappers and cheap doer-uppers are in short supply in London right now, but I've always got my eyes open. Again, thanks for the worthy tips.
French here. Only on this video did it jump on me that « allez » was a reference to the screams of Tour de France fans on the roadside. Allez ! Allez ! Which basically means « go ». Funny thing is the way RJ says it , with the z, in sounds perfectly like « à l’aise » in French, which means « very easy ».
@@mariamartins367 You're right, the way RJ says it, it sounds exactly like « à l’aise », but to be honest I think that « à l’aise » is better translated into English as ' *_at_* ease' (whereas ' very easy ' would be « très facile », wouldn't it?). But well-spotted, in any case :-) !
@RJ, you can talk to the frame builder Paul Brodie (who has his own YT channel) about replacing the cracked chainstay. That could be an interesting colab.
It's always wise to check these things particularly when someone says "It was serviced just before I put it in the shed." I've seen some truly incredible so called "servicing" practices.
First thing I try is moving the seat post. Aluminum to steel is a tough bond. I heard of a guy soaking the frame in ammonia, believe it or not, to free it up. Then forks for bends or cracks. Then rear triangle. If all is good, and I really want the bike, time to talk turkey. ( no more bikes for me)
Yea, no. Unless it was an old Eddy Merckx, or a vintage mountain bike ( my weakness), too much work. Haha. The guy I talked to actually soaked the frame in a kiddie pool of ammonia. Hahaha. Goes to show the beauty of assembly grease or bees wax. Cheers!
Looks like a nice bike, cant u let someone weld the frame back together, patch it up with sheet metal for example? Of course if the inside of the tube is rusted away theres no point.
you could eventually get the frame fixed, you'd need to get a frame builder to replace the chainstay which might cost more than a new cheap frame but it is saveable
@@RJTheBikeGuy love all your cheap finds and motivates me to hunt down deals here locally. Whats your favorite places for hidden gems? craigslist, offerup or flea markets?
Good eye rj...i have a question now...is the damage you found on the bike bad enough to deem the bike no good? Couldn’t it be fixed like one would fix a car’s dent and then just paint over it? by the way your videos are very very nice...they are full of detail...thank you..
@RJTheBikeGuy I'm 6'2 n half n wanted to know if you could tell me what size bike would be fitted for me ?? I need help on this my brother n love your knowledge n breakdown of bikes 💪🏽💖🚴🏾♂️
Before I watch it. Rusted - chain, chainring bolts, maybe freewheel. Handlebar tape coming off, brake and shiting cables/housing too short, rear brake does not line center
I was thinking "No biggie. No biggie. $100 seems quite the deal. Why are you even making a video about this? Uh oh!". I bought one for $35, a Univega tourer, and didn't notice the broken off cantilever break post. Frame is still a beauty so I am just going to figure out a way to get a front brake that works, maybe even pay somebody to braise a post on.
Can the frame be repaired to close the crack or straighten the frame through welding? I live in Seattle area and there is a customer welding shop for bicycle which helped me to weld two tabs on the front fork that allows me to convert my Specialized bike with cantilever brakes to disc brakes. I am not sure those shops will be able to repair a cracked frame.
I would have never thought to look at the seat post gap, even though I've had this happened to me on a previous purchase. I guess I get over passionate about the possibility of a new acquisition to the herd and overlook issues, especially ones that are only visible from small clues. I have gotten to the point where I take tools to see if the seat post and stem will move, and if not, price the bike accordingly (or just walk). Hey RJ, is there a specific tool YOU use to spread out a frame that's been subjected to a too small seat post? Something I could also find for, like 10$, at a flea market tool swap booth?
@@RJTheBikeGuy You're a genius. I actually thought I had watch every bicycle repair and maintenance video you have created, but I think I somehow missed this one.
A split chainstay caused by frozen water? I really can’t imagine how this can happen. How gets so much water in the chainstay? You didn’t mentioned, but you probably could save the fork as well beside all other parts.
Just a thought...the seatpost on bike was wrong size...cuz the missing one was out for a while (in the rain)? Then gravity and physics took over and water followed the path of least resistance... Once the water was in there and a seatpost was put in...irregardless of fit. The sun could not evaporate the water it could not get to. Happens when you spill stuff in a car. You will get mold/mildew and unless you remove the carpet and insulation... Or at least the cheapskate way. Find the low spots in the floor pan and drill a hole to allow drainage... That water is staying. Sorry for the long explaining...but just. A thought. 😀😇😎
@@mrupholsteryman Exactly what I did in my Toyota Sienna van. Water was getting in somewhere and I could not find out where. All windows and gaskets were tight, So I just drilled some holes in the back well and problem solved !
@@triumphmanful just creates another potential problem of allowing rust and critters a welcome into the cabin...but hey...open windows do that for winged creatures and rust is like sin. Until JESUS does away with it completely.... A reminder to us now how life could be better and it isn't. 😀😇😎
What a shame this one is not a rebuild candidate! Nice catch on those issues. Now I can use that as an example of things to watch for when trying to accumulate for building the frame I select. Do you sell any parts left over?
@@RJTheBikeGuy cool. You seem trustworthy and going out to find them carries extra risk, exposure, and is now really prohibited in some places. Your tech and willingness to pass it on clearly is of great benefit for many of us. Thanks again.
Really great to hear. My PayPal account got hacked 2 weeks ago today. Trying to straighten up the mess. Still waiting on my new debit card. The mail is getting slower and I have 2 packages being with open search cases with USPS. Just trying to use UPS & FedEx and minimizing risk. Trying safer alternative ways to accomplish things. Sounds like you are as well. Hope everyone follows suit. Who thought even biking would be risky this time last year. Stay safe and good health!
I have the same bike. Do you know what is the largest tire size that I can put on these bike. I have 700x28 and there are a few milimiters of clearance between the tire and the brake caliper, but maybe i'm in the limit. Thank you
If you buy enough bikes , you will get burned a few times. years back I would have missed some of these but not now ! too bad for the frame, that would have been one good looking project.
Cuz this is an Allez frame (French: 2nd person plural of the verb 'to go' pronounced ALL-AY) you might strip it, send it to a fame builder, and have a new tube put in. At the same time, the frame maker can align everything perfectly, chase threads in the BB and face the BB and steering tube. With paint and graphics, this frame can be made like new. Even if you buy another Allez frame, chances are you would have to get it all checked out by a frame builder anyway. I have five steel frames (three currently on the road) that came to me in nice condition. But, ALL of them benefited from the attention off a professional frame builder. You can do a lot your self if you buy the tools and do some study >>> $$$$$¥¥¥¥¥.
@@RJTheBikeGuy no sir...but, like you, I AM an experienced bike repair guy. I've been doing it for over 40 years. You do your due diligence ..you check the frame for symmetry, you check your rear spacing, and if all is good, your repair it. The only reason I said anything, was that you said you would like to have an Allez in your collection. This is not a complicated repair, but, if you are somehow offended by my observation? Then I apologize. I've learned a lot of tricks from you, but if this isn't worth your time? I get it
The frame is a No thanks for me. Otherwise a total teardown, Clean, lube, cables and housings, brake pads, in this case Saddle,Bar tape, tires tubes and chain and maybe peddles. Depends on your desire and the "market" if you were going to flip it. Enjoyed the video Rj
@@RJTheBikeGuy PLSSS JUST THIS ONCEEE OR CAN YOU GIVE ME A LINK OF ONE OF YOUR VIDEOS THAT COULD HELP ME MY FRONT DERAILER CANT SHIFT GEARS ITS ALWAYS STUCK AT THE 1ST IT CANT MOVE TO THE 2ND OR 3RD
I would not notice the seat post, guaranteed. Shifter. spokes, wobble rims...yes. Split frame...probably. Don't know part values well. I would not offer $50. I would just pass on the bike.
You bought a piece of junk. I just picked up a free vintage Specialized Crossroads sitting along the street with a sign on it. There's no rust on the chain or sprocket it's so nice I only had to clean the dust off it and blow the tires up. It also has roadbars and boxers.
get the frame welded. Put a shim in the seat post hole. I did it and it fixed the seat problem. Easy stuff to fix. I fix bikes for fun and give them to needy kids. Some real nice bikes I sell cheap. I barely make my expenses back, but hey, at least they don't end up in the landfill ! Our planet has enough garbage !
For more bike repair videos hit the subscribe button 🛑 and click the notification bell ► bit.ly/SubRJTheBikeGuy
Hi RJ. After riding for 3 years, I decided to do a covid project and build myself a fixed gear bike. I picked all the parts, got the tools, and assembled the whole thing myself. Not gonna lie...your videos were used as references many times. Thanks for all your help!
@Bill Bradford guess what, bill noone gives a shit about the french. noone likes the french and the french like noone. Their cars are absolute shit. learning the french language is a waste of your time, as it is only useful in a tiny, rotten place. But hey, they know how to protest, they make great wine and don't skimp on the butter, so I'll give them a pass.
Hey RJ, love your channel and the content you put out.
Very informative and a fair amount of hidden knowledge gems, which we all need now and then.
I have a 2010 XL Specialized Allez Frame and fork I am willing to donate to you, but you might have to meet me half way on the shipping as I'm in the UK
Oh I would notice that split alright, when the rear triangle collapses, probably at the stop lights, at rush hour, when 100's of people are round to point and laugh at me. OR after i'd ordered $100's worth of parts to fix it up.
LOL!
Lmao, finally a person I can relate too..stay safe!
I wouldn’t have spotted the split until strip down and clean. I buy lots of old bikes and it’s always a gamble. Thanks for your videos RJ, they are really valuable and appreciated to us other guys that also work on old bikes.
I've fixed a chain stay split on a bike I liked. Hammer down the bulge, grind off rust. Cut a small section of steel tubing. Shape the patch to fit. Clamp and flux wire weld it on. Clean up imperfections with angle grinder and apply paint. Not as good as new but stronger!
"stronger" than new?
If so, wow.
a ... bike frame (cro-moly?) badly compromised in this way may or may not be ... fatal.
Steel frame almost always means repairable frame.
Changing the whole chainstay is more of an ideal repair if you ever plan on saving a rare frame and using the bike again. It's just costly, though.
Will you do a video on full suspension bike build?
Ice splitting frames is one problem I'll probably never see living in Australia.
Agree with you on that
Never saw it where i live, here, and it’s pretty cold.
Northwestern America (and Canada) seem to be totally on another level when it comes to winter, subzero temperatures and snow blizzards.
Isn't it snowing in Sydney?
End of August in Northeast US and I have to start thinking about getting the furnace ready for hearing season :D
I meant northeastern, of course, my bad.
I found an old Trek 400 frame in the garbage, has some surface rust but don't think it's anything too bad. Making it a budget single speed
I popped to see my daughter and a nieghour had left outside a dawes galaxy al I said could I have it they said yea fine take it. I looked at it it had 26 inch mtb wheels on it probably why it couldn't be ridden. Anyway I found another free dawes that had the correct wheels but the rest was a rusty pile. Swapped wheels over the gears shift fine so been really lucky the only think I have to buy is a saddle and post. I love my crusty bike tho dunno why just nice to get something broken and fixed for next to nothing.
Great vid.
Thanks for sharing your buy, inspection and result you came away with. No better way to cycle than on a recycled bicycle, or maybe not so in this case. Im sure we will see the parts put to good use though. All the best Andy
good deal for the parts and much value for those looking to restore a bike on what to look for. Video + $50 for parts def cant beat that
How about to weld, or to solder
this frame? Dissolve rust with acid, heat the edges and solder with brass, then grind.
the cost of someone who has enough skill to restore it correctly.. could be spent of a different frame. really it would be better to cut the chain stay off and have a new tube welded that has the correct shape but it would need to be fully jigged up and painted afterwards and..well why. unless it was to preserve a rare iconic frame the time and effort would be orders of magnitude over what the bike would be worth.
@@bretmohler9719 any competent weld shop could do this quickly and easily...yes...you would need to do some prep work, but...its a steel frame...no complicated process, and negligent frame warp...easy peasy...heck, I could do it in my garage
@@stephenstevens6573 ok then go fix it for us and post the vid
@@bretmohler9719 send it to me
@@stephenstevens6573 interesting..I figured it would be obvious for any competent watcher of TH-cam to know I am not the person who owns it. DM RJ
There are so many older Shimano brifters out there like that could be put back into service, because they're very robustly designed. Unfortunately replacement hoods aren't made past a couple generations, so these shifters ultimately become paperweights when the hoods wear out... Seems like such a waste.
I think some weight weenies use heat shrink tube on their brifters. Probably not as convenient but certainly incredibly light.
maybe diy with leather ?
Allez (ah-LAY!) is the imperative form of the French verb aller, which means "to go." Allez means GO!
Well, the bottle cage is good. 👍
It is, I hope. 😂
LOL
Good vid RJ. Nice catch on that seat post. Looks like someone added a shim made of a piece of soda can to make that post tight enough. Possibly a 26.8 post in a 27.2 seat tube.
Too bad about the frame. Those older steel Allez models are nice rides. This one, with the longer wheelbase and rear eyelets would have made a good around town bike.
If the frame is steel, you can proably bring it to a welder and her can weld the split back up. You cn grind the weld smooth and touch up the paint.
Haven't watched past 0:07. Here goes:
- Possible 39/54t chainring combo on an older 110bcd crank, so chainline/chainring clearance is suspect
- Possible stiff links in that rusted chain, skipping a possibility
- Possibly broken Shimano Light Action rear derailer
- That era of Shimano 600 brifters - guaranteed to be gummed up and take weeks of degreaser and clicking to unstick
- Someone liked REALLY SHORT cable housing when they built this thing. In fact, stupidly short.
- A couple of obvious pad marks on the rear rim, yet only in one place. Truing issue?
Just watched the video. Split chainstay? Hid that well...
Its a shame about the frame RJ, but some nice retro parts to yield for another build.
Hope you and yours are all safe and well RJ.👍😊🚴
Thanks, I always learn from your videos.
Wheel it on into my shop buddy.
Spoke Replacement: $25
Tire/Tube Install: $15
Chain Install: $10
Bar Tape Wrap: $15
True Front: $15
Shifter Flush: $10
Frame Repair: Free inside the dumpster out back.
It would take me 100 years to notice the split and the seat post.
The chain and rear wheel would have got my alarm bells going, RJ and I'd have been really thorough with further inspection. Still, fifty bucks for the spares salvaged seems to be reasonable.
I pretty much stopped looking after seeing the split.
@@RJTheBikeGuy scrappers and cheap doer-uppers are in short supply in London right now, but I've always got my eyes open. Again, thanks for the worthy tips.
Nice, I've sold 4 Allez in my flip history...they make good flips
That’s a shame RJ if the chain stay wasn’t split you could’ve had that bike running and looking so nice Nice video though .
Can welding be solved for the toasted frame? or not?
The parts are easily worth $ 50, the fork alone & head set. Handlebars, the freewheel/cassette. Group set too.
The Z in Allez is silent. I know this because I took French in high school and I'm a proud owner of an Allez Sprint frame :)
French here.
Only on this video did it jump on me that « allez » was a reference to the screams of Tour de France fans on the roadside. Allez ! Allez ! Which basically means « go ».
Funny thing is the way RJ says it , with the z, in sounds perfectly like « à l’aise » in French, which means « very easy ».
@@mariamartins367 You're right, the way RJ says it, it sounds exactly like « à l’aise », but to be honest I think that « à l’aise » is better translated into English as ' *_at_* ease' (whereas ' very easy ' would be « très facile », wouldn't it?).
But well-spotted, in any case :-) !
@@C345OFR oui, c’est vrai.
Isn’t RJ in Canada? You’d think he’d know that.
@RJ, you can talk to the frame builder Paul Brodie (who has his own YT channel) about replacing the cracked chainstay. That could be an interesting colab.
It's always wise to check these things particularly when someone says "It was serviced just before I put it in the shed." I've seen some truly incredible so called "servicing" practices.
This was a great video! - would love to see more of this sort of series - helps train the eye for faults in a bike.
I found a well maintained early 2000’s Allez Elite at a garage sale for $25. I’d like to convert to a 3 speed..I’d love your thoughts on that.
Awesome RJ, embarrassing how much I learned, but grateful as always! Thanks brother!
First thing I try is moving the seat post. Aluminum to steel is a tough bond. I heard of a guy soaking the frame in ammonia, believe it or not, to free it up. Then forks for bends or cracks. Then rear triangle. If all is good, and I really want the bike, time to talk turkey. ( no more bikes for me)
th-cam.com/play/PLxO5aF0sensiVdiClC_JH6OboqFl5Dvay.html
Yea, no. Unless it was an old Eddy Merckx, or a vintage mountain bike ( my weakness), too much work. Haha. The guy I talked to actually soaked the frame in a kiddie pool of ammonia. Hahaha. Goes to show the beauty of assembly grease or bees wax. Cheers!
Please make a video of your bike collection, and components that you are proud to have 🙏
He paid for this bike with the recycled pop cans from his garage!! 😀
That was very useful, RJ. In future I'll be making note of the seat bolt when looking at frames. Thanks!
Looks like a nice bike, cant u let someone weld the frame back together, patch it up with sheet metal for example? Of course if the inside of the tube is rusted away theres no point.
The tube is DEFORMED!!!! It's garbage!!!
Its still a good buy due to the parts haul. Its a shame it has a crack in the frame..Great video RJ!
Would have found that stuff easily...
Cause I'm a big fan, luv your vids keep on educating us RJ.
You're The(bike)Man!
you could eventually get the frame fixed, you'd need to get a frame builder to replace the chainstay which might cost more than a new cheap frame but it is saveable
It would cost more than the bike is worth to have it done correctly.
I love your channel and learn so much through your videos, always wondered how many bikes do you have in your collection?
IDK. Like 15 bikes I think among the bikes I plan on keeping.
@@RJTheBikeGuy love all your cheap finds and motivates me to hunt down deals here locally. Whats your favorite places for hidden gems? craigslist, offerup or flea markets?
How much do you think you could get/did get from those RSX Brifters and Derailleur after cleaning them up nicely?
Good eye rj...i have a question now...is the damage you found on the bike bad enough to deem the bike no good? Couldn’t it be fixed like one would fix a car’s dent and then just paint over it? by the way your videos are very very nice...they are full of detail...thank you..
Read comment in description.
You now have a early example of a hydroformed steel bike frame.
@RJTheBikeGuy I'm 6'2 n half n wanted to know if you could tell me what size bike would be fitted for me ?? I need help on this my brother n love your knowledge n breakdown of bikes 💪🏽💖🚴🏾♂️
www.coloradocyclist.com/bikefit
"Specialized Allehzz i-"... *record scratch* sorry what?
Isn't French supposed to be a major language in Canada? 🤣
I felt dismezzed when I heard that. Guess RJ didn't pezz attention in French class back in the dezz.
2:30 I wonder if the guy behind the Pithy Bikes channel is up for another project… 🤔
Great video. Love the old bikes.
Do worn out RD pulley can cause chain skipping??
I replace the cogs and chain and still have the problems
I saw shims in the seat post so it may not be original to the bike. I never seen a bike split like a water pipe before that’s a new one to me.
I have. A few forks and a couple frames.
Before I watch it. Rusted - chain, chainring bolts, maybe freewheel. Handlebar tape coming off, brake and shiting cables/housing too short, rear brake does not line center
You can sell the - impossible to get - brifter hoods on ebay for 50 bucks, they look pretty alright :D
This. Everyone saying there is no value has no idea of vintage used bike parts market. Not a steal, but I would have paid $50 all day for parts alone.
Part out. Unfortunately Rsx brifters are trash.
I was thinking "No biggie. No biggie. $100 seems quite the deal. Why are you even making a video about this? Uh oh!". I bought one for $35, a Univega tourer, and didn't notice the broken off cantilever break post. Frame is still a beauty so I am just going to figure out a way to get a front brake that works, maybe even pay somebody to braise a post on.
Can the frame be repaired to close the crack or straighten the frame through welding? I live in Seattle area and there is a customer welding shop for bicycle which helped me to weld two tabs on the front fork that allows me to convert my Specialized bike with cantilever brakes to disc brakes. I am not sure those shops will be able to repair a cracked frame.
Read comment in description!
I'd had to settle for the water bottle cage...LOL!
One thing is good that old bikes survived through the time it's not that peace of marketing trash.
That topline crank( cheapo crook bros) worth some cash!
A really nicce looking bike. I can see why you went for it.
I would have never thought to look at the seat post gap, even though I've had this happened to me on a previous purchase. I guess I get over passionate about the possibility of a new acquisition to the herd and overlook issues, especially ones that are only visible from small clues. I have gotten to the point where I take tools to see if the seat post and stem will move, and if not, price the bike accordingly (or just walk). Hey RJ, is there a specific tool YOU use to spread out a frame that's been subjected to a too small seat post? Something I could also find for, like 10$, at a flea market tool swap booth?
th-cam.com/video/E4YHKdqwnFY/w-d-xo.html
@@RJTheBikeGuy You're a genius. I actually thought I had watch every bicycle repair and maintenance video you have created, but I think I somehow missed this one.
@@virgilfulton4426 I am probably the only one who has watch ALL my videos. LOL!
That is indeed a nice bicycle but if you say the chain stay toasted the frame then so be it. Anyway to repair just that part of the frame?
Read comment in the description.
Wow I’ve never heard of that, thanks for making this video.
Very insightful!
Thanks! Learned a lot from this!
RJ marathon today,I'm at about 25 videos watched. Cool
I have seen them all.
@@RJTheBikeGuy😅.
The frame would make a nice art piece to hang on the wall.
A split chainstay caused by frozen water? I really can’t imagine how this can happen. How gets so much water in the chainstay? You didn’t mentioned, but you probably could save the fork as well beside all other parts.
I will save the fork. I have seen other bikes/forks that have split the same way.
Just a thought...the seatpost on bike was wrong size...cuz the missing one was out for a while (in the rain)? Then gravity and physics took over and water followed the path of least resistance... Once the water was in there and a seatpost was put in...irregardless of fit. The sun could not evaporate the water it could not get to.
Happens when you spill stuff in a car. You will get mold/mildew and unless you remove the carpet and insulation... Or at least the cheapskate way. Find the low spots in the floor pan and drill a hole to allow drainage... That water is staying.
Sorry for the long explaining...but just. A thought. 😀😇😎
@@mrupholsteryman That is my guess.
@@mrupholsteryman Exactly what I did in my Toyota Sienna van. Water was getting in somewhere and I could not find out where. All windows and gaskets were tight, So I just drilled some holes in the back well and problem solved !
@@triumphmanful just creates another potential problem of allowing rust and critters a welcome into the cabin...but hey...open windows do that for winged creatures and rust is like sin. Until JESUS does away with it completely.... A reminder to us now how life could be better and it isn't. 😀😇😎
Few good parts there for fifty bucks, must have been left in the rain, rotted from the inside out, I would say good deal, shifters wheels and cranks.
I certainly would not have noticed the split but my question is what are you going to do with the frame
Dunno. Maybe cut it up and make wind chimes.
@@RJTheBikeGuy LOL
Never bought a used bike, so good things to know if I do see one I liked 👍
What a shame this one is not a rebuild candidate! Nice catch on those issues. Now I can use that as an example of things to watch for when trying to accumulate for building the frame I select. Do you sell any parts left over?
I don't sell parts.
@@RJTheBikeGuy cool. You seem trustworthy and going out to find them carries extra risk, exposure, and is now really prohibited in some places. Your tech and willingness to pass it on clearly is of great benefit for many of us. Thanks again.
@@charlesriley23 I wear masks and use hand sanitizer, and maintain social distancing. I buy a lot of parts on ebay, craigslist, amazon, etc.
Really great to hear. My PayPal account got hacked 2 weeks ago today. Trying to straighten up the mess. Still waiting on my new debit card. The mail is getting slower and I have 2 packages being with open search cases with USPS. Just trying to use UPS & FedEx and minimizing risk. Trying safer alternative ways to accomplish things. Sounds like you are as well. Hope everyone follows suit. Who thought even biking would be risky this time last year. Stay safe and good health!
Is it not possible to weld the chainstay?
The whole tube is deformed and likely damaged.
Tires brought to max pressure and actually ridden for 10+ miles sorts out any flatspots.
Frame looks similar to my gitane avenir on columbus gara
I have the same bike. Do you know what is the largest tire size that I can put on these bike. I have 700x28 and there are a few milimiters of clearance between the tire and the brake caliper, but maybe i'm in the limit. Thank you
No idea.
@@RJTheBikeGuy thanks anyway, great videos.
If you buy enough bikes , you will get burned a few times. years back I would have missed some of these but not now ! too bad for the frame, that would have been one good looking project.
Cuz this is an Allez frame (French: 2nd person plural of the verb 'to go' pronounced ALL-AY) you might strip it, send it to a fame builder, and have a new tube put in. At the same time, the frame maker can align everything perfectly, chase threads in the BB and face the BB and steering tube. With paint and graphics, this frame can be made like new. Even if you buy another Allez frame, chances are you would have to get it all checked out by a frame builder anyway. I have five steel frames (three currently on the road) that came to me in nice condition. But, ALL of them benefited from the attention off a professional frame builder. You can do a lot your self if you buy the tools and do some study >>> $$$$$¥¥¥¥¥.
Interesting video.
Frame could be welded and repaired relatively easily
So, you are an experienced frame builder? Or are you just throwing your two cents in?
@@RJTheBikeGuy no sir...but, like you, I AM an experienced bike repair guy. I've been doing it for over 40 years. You do your due diligence ..you check the frame for symmetry, you check your rear spacing, and if all is good, your repair it. The only reason I said anything, was that you said you would like to have an Allez in your collection. This is not a complicated repair, but, if you are somehow offended by my observation? Then I apologize. I've learned a lot of tricks from you, but if this isn't worth your time? I get it
The frame is a No thanks for me. Otherwise a total teardown, Clean, lube, cables and housings, brake pads, in this case Saddle,Bar tape, tires tubes and chain and maybe peddles. Depends on your desire and the "market" if you were going to flip it.
Enjoyed the video Rj
I am just going to part it out.
Around here, you would spend $100 fixing it up, and be able to sell it for $75. :)
@@billincolumbia Here in good shape, I could probably sell it for $175+ in normal times.
@@RJTheBikeGuy That's amazing!
RJ IS THERE ANYWAY I CAN CONTACT YOU I HAVE A PROBLEM WITH MY BIKE AND I DONT KNOW HOW TO FIX IT PLS REPLY
I do not do private consultations.
@@RJTheBikeGuy PLSSS JUST THIS ONCEEE OR CAN YOU GIVE ME A LINK OF ONE OF YOUR VIDEOS THAT COULD HELP ME MY FRONT DERAILER CANT SHIFT GEARS ITS ALWAYS STUCK AT THE 1ST IT CANT MOVE TO THE 2ND OR 3RD
@@haribazo th-cam.com/video/gwBQxhZhKnE/w-d-xo.html
some problems in frame.
I would not notice the seat post, guaranteed. Shifter. spokes, wobble rims...yes. Split frame...probably.
Don't know part values well. I would not offer $50. I would just pass on the bike.
These shifters are helpful, though, i can understand the offer
RJ saved someone else from buying it and potentially getting really hurt when it eventually snaps. Parts are useful, particularly to RJ.
Does welding will solve the problem?
Read comment in description.
Is welding not a viable solution?
Read comment in description.
@rj the bike guy..but can u ride a wheelie?
I could never ride a decent wheelie.
I wish my country had cheap second hand bikes
You should buy an allez frame and move the parts over
Can the crack be welded ?
Read comment in description.
Buyer beware, many older bikes. Getting lot of broken axles, run over by car in garage. Just take about 10 min to check things out
You bought a piece of junk. I just picked up a free vintage Specialized Crossroads sitting along the street with a sign on it. There's no rust on the chain or sprocket it's so nice I only had to clean the dust off it and blow the tires up. It also has roadbars and boxers.
super video
It's super example why you shouldn't keep your bike outside. (at least in winter)
True!!!
I woulda noticed the seat post clamp when I wanted to raise the seat, because I'm so tall xD
But also- I live in the Netherlands.
Are you sure you can't true and weld the frame. It's gone anyway. Cost nothing to try. I would... If it don't work throw it away...
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You think the parts are worth 50 bucks RJ?
That is a real shame lovely little bike the allez.
Good job spotting all those things! Looking forward to seeing what you’re gonna do with the parts.
Cain ⚠️🤧
Then you can feel Not THE love that ITs get in THE past ,. For THE bike
,.. ITs toust ⚠️🤧
get the frame welded. Put a shim in the seat post hole. I did it and it fixed the seat problem. Easy stuff to fix. I fix bikes for fun and give them to needy kids. Some real nice bikes I sell cheap. I barely make my expenses back, but hey, at least they don't end up in the landfill ! Our planet has enough garbage !
That must have been disappointing to find the frame in that condition. Do you think the chain stay could be cleaned up and mig welded?
Nah. It's toast. As mentioned in the video, it looks like that whole side is deformed.