Share.

24 Comments

  1. AccomplishedBid5867 on

    Sorry to nitpick, but these are ‘track ends’ not dropouts.

    Personally, I’d pass, as I’m unsure how aluminium would hold up for much longer or if having new ones fitted would be feasible. If it was steel, it wouldn’t be an issue.

  2. In this state it’s closer to a nightmare of you ask me, but when someone more knowledgeable can confirm for a fact, that structurally it’s a ok, than it only needs a bit of cleanup and good to go.

  3. if it’s your dream bike and the price is right I would pick it up in here is why.

    It’s aluminum and repairable. any decent weld shop can fill that groove from the nut bite with a TIG welder and it’ll be just as good as new when repaired right. A machine shop might have a guy that can TIG aluminum too.

    ask the good folks at r/welder if that wear can be filled and filed flat again. .

  4. Snag it for cheap. You can get some 2mm steel plates and sandwich the dropout. Lots of aluminum frames have this type of reinforcement already.

  5. JollyGreenGigantor on

    And this my friends is why you use chain tensioners. They sandwich between the frame and track end

  6. I’d buy it. This can be repaired by a frame builder, worth it for a dream frame.

    What’s the frame btw?

  7. Send those photos to a metal shop for a quote. Any decent shop should be able to pull that drop out of and manufacture a new one. They’re essentially end caps on tubing

  8. Dave_Whitinsky on

    People point to frame builders here, but genuinely interested if there’s are any small frame builders that work with alu?

  9. Active_Ad_5322 on

    Aftermarket track “dropout” plates. Ya gonna need to do some prep to make them work.
    Lots of variations of those plates that are make/model specific. You’re gonna need to get some measurements before you just buy any.

    Also, your “dropouts” are THICK… big ole’ chunky bois. You gotta lot of meat still left, so ain’t no worries.

    (Just woke up. Forgot what bike nerds call track horizontal “dropouts”, cause I know someone here is gonna correct me)

  10. Full_Security7780 on

    Keep dreaming (and shopping for another frame). If the drop outs look that bad, what does the rest of the frame look like?

  11. tinygraysiamesecat on

    Dude that aluminum has been severely deformed. If it isn’t cracked already, it soon will be. Aluminum doesn’t like to be deformed. It forms tiny cracks in the surface that will turn into big cracks. 

Leave A Reply