Yeah, that’s a good find for $80 — nice lugged steel frame, durable old Shimano stuff. Something weird is going on with the downtube shifters and it’s missing a brake lever but assume you’ve budgeted for some parts in the resto
killer_sheltie on
$80 is a good price these days. Looks like a good hobby restore bike especially if you like the vintage look. The only thing I really didn’t like on my vintage road bike (my first adult bike back in the day) was the shifter location.
MEng83 on
Fuck yeah
Master-Emergency178 on
is that arabesque O_O ?
Foolgazi on
If that bike needed nothing including tires it’d be worth maybe $125. $80 as it sits isn’t necessarily overpriced, but I also def wouldn’t pay any more than that.
Edit: For those who downvoted, I’m genuinely curious what makes this bike worth more than every other mainstream steel bike from the ‘70s-‘80s that needs some work.
SpecialDesigner5571 on
You’re going to spend way more than $80 on needed tools to restore it. Parts on top of that.
DigPoke on
Hell yea $80 is nothing. Buy it, get it tuned up for $150 and go ride. Or better yet do it yourself!!!
GiganticCrow on
Note its quite big, OP. Looks like a 58-60cm frame. Are you over 6 foot?
Safe-Warning-448 on
Sure
Grande_Mangiattore on
Nice bice!
derfahrer924 on
No. That is a bike that should just be given away.
bigsmonkler on
Good find
wlexxx2 on
looks good
i would get lower gearing, if you have any hills at all, these are way too not-low
that would be $40 for new cassette, $25 for new chain, then $250+ for smaller chain rings
then you could sell the removed parts [according to some other posts]
the handlebars and brake levers are a bit old-fashioned
alltheluckanditsbad on
Buy it, ride it, and over time replace the parts you feel are needed
uuyatt on
Gonna cost more to get it up and running than just buying a functional/already tuned bike. Just an FYI.
Also appears to be a large frame. Around 60cm. For someone over 6 foot.
Po0rYorick on
I’d buy. Expect to put some work and parts into it, but that’s part of the fun.
mightknowbackback on
Cool ride. Looks to be in decent shape considering the age. Depends a bit on the local market, but $80 does not seem out of line for most places. Just watch some YouTube videos about maintenance and tune up and make sure you’re up to the task.
19 Comments
Yup
Yeah, that’s a good find for $80 — nice lugged steel frame, durable old Shimano stuff. Something weird is going on with the downtube shifters and it’s missing a brake lever but assume you’ve budgeted for some parts in the resto
$80 is a good price these days. Looks like a good hobby restore bike especially if you like the vintage look. The only thing I really didn’t like on my vintage road bike (my first adult bike back in the day) was the shifter location.
Fuck yeah
is that arabesque O_O ?
If that bike needed nothing including tires it’d be worth maybe $125. $80 as it sits isn’t necessarily overpriced, but I also def wouldn’t pay any more than that.
Edit: For those who downvoted, I’m genuinely curious what makes this bike worth more than every other mainstream steel bike from the ‘70s-‘80s that needs some work.
You’re going to spend way more than $80 on needed tools to restore it. Parts on top of that.
Hell yea $80 is nothing. Buy it, get it tuned up for $150 and go ride. Or better yet do it yourself!!!
Note its quite big, OP. Looks like a 58-60cm frame. Are you over 6 foot?
Sure
Nice bice!
No. That is a bike that should just be given away.
Good find
looks good
i would get lower gearing, if you have any hills at all, these are way too not-low
that would be $40 for new cassette, $25 for new chain, then $250+ for smaller chain rings
then you could sell the removed parts [according to some other posts]
the handlebars and brake levers are a bit old-fashioned
Buy it, ride it, and over time replace the parts you feel are needed
Gonna cost more to get it up and running than just buying a functional/already tuned bike. Just an FYI.
Also appears to be a large frame. Around 60cm. For someone over 6 foot.
I’d buy. Expect to put some work and parts into it, but that’s part of the fun.
Cool ride. Looks to be in decent shape considering the age. Depends a bit on the local market, but $80 does not seem out of line for most places. Just watch some YouTube videos about maintenance and tune up and make sure you’re up to the task.
Can I ask where you’re located(state, country)?