
I was planning on installing the
Acor bottom bracket this morning having flooded the frame internally with
Waxoyl on Friday night. This was somewhat dependant upon the
splined fitting tool arriving in today’s post. Sadly the postman brought it to my door but fought shy of ringing the bell, choosing to deliver his calling card instead.

Undeterred, with a Saturday to myself, I took advantage of the warm spring weather and set up camp on the back garden’s concrete quarter. Teenage dream securely in the stand, I set about cleaning the derailleur hanger, lever and bottle boss threads before lightly greasing and installing the respective components.
The transmission save for bottom bracket and chain remains unchanged but elsewhere there’s select modernisation to herald personal and technological developments over the past eighteen years.

I
couldn’t resist upgrading the stoppers to these high lustre dual pivot callipers with Ti fittings keeping the weight low. The front end is taking an equally radical departure. Gone are the classic, if conservative 42cm
Cinelli bar, stem and
Campagnolo Athena brake levers. Enter
Nitto pursuit bars and Ahead stem-naturally demanding an adaptor and lacking the outright rigidity of
threadless configurations but silver anodising keeps things aesthetically crisp. The Athena were substituted for some very sweet
Acor carbon
TT levers-the sort secured into the ends by expandable wedges, eliminating the need for plugs.

Offering the bottom bracket to the shell and threading it hand tight allowed me to temporarily position the crank, providing a useful template for accurately mounting the Victory front
mech. These beautiful NOS derailleurs from 1982 were an eighteenth birthday present from a friend who sadly
hasn’t been in touch for ten years so they’re staying. As the old saying goes,
Campagnolo wears in…others wear out.
The coming days should present sufficient opportunity to install the bottom bracket and
crankset. Hopefully in the next couple of weeks Justin will have a spare couple of hours to fit the new headset and of course, ream the seat-tube properly. From there it’s simply a question of wiring everything up, taping the bars and enjoying some long summer miles…
Low down n’ dirty might be an apt description of British Politicians at the moment but I’m starting to think it’d look great emblazoned along the Teenage dream’s top-tube.
Hmm, might have a graphic designer knock me up some decals…

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