(MBBO Class 1) The Ginch: Final Pics

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Finally got some time to work on my own stuff instead of everyone else's. Brief history: The favorite bike from my childhood was my Sears Spyder 24". I bought it from a buddy in about 1980 or 81. I think I gave him $25 bucks for it. I got I home and my dad laughed but an hour later we had bent and stretched the forks and had a 16" front wheel (he was in what is referred to as "a motorcycle club" back then). I rolled the handlebars forward so far I could barley ride it but it looked cool. All my friends had bmx bikes (I had one as well) but I rode my Spyder everywhere. It got lost in the shuffle of life after hanging in the garage for years. I finally found one a few weeks ago and finally made the purchase. I am going Class One Resto with some hop ups. Plans include maybe a fueler style fork, wheelie bar, monster sissy bar, and some powder coat among other things. The build off is just an excuse to build the bike I always wanted when I was 12 years old.

Here are all the pieces somewhat assembled. It is a mess with 1/4" of grease, oil, grass, and hair shoved into ever orifice. The paint is thrashed, and its missing some of the key parts.
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I spent a few minutes tearing it down to bare frame. All the bearing are trashed, cables are trashed, and tires are trash. I did a little grinding to smooth some of the tapped holes out and rebuilt the back wheel. Then started polishing it out to see what it would do. Its presentable but not perfect. Good enough that I don't think I will replace it.
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I started on the rear derailleur. The teeth on the wheels are ground smooth and its caked it mush. Soaked it in a can of carb cleaner while working on another project then hit it with a tooth brush and blew it out with the air compressor.
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Love those liner-Spyder frames!
 
Very cool!
Well heck. I've been working with my son with his entry and haven't unburied my own... which is a '69 24" Spyder 5-speed. o_O

Maybe I'll have to do the Rail instead?
Battle of the Spyders?

Luke.
 
Sure I was suppose to be mowing the lawn but I snuck to the shop for a bit and rebuilt the front derailleur.
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Finished cleaning up the front sprockets and reassembled
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Disassembled the shifter assembly completely, cleaned it all up internally, relubed, reassembled, and did some quick buffing
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Like I said, I am going for the resto mod look so restoring and rebuilding all the original parts is though very time consuming it's also very high on my list.
 
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Nice work, I find it rather therapeutic restoring parts, bringing things back and giving them another life. Guess I don't quite fit into the throwaway society we have here.
Don't get me wrong, I like a shiny new thing from time to time, just not as gratifying to me.
Sorry, didn't mean to highjack your thread, keep building brother!
Cheers,
Dr. T


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Dr. T...your right. One of the DVD players quit working the other day so it got trashed and a new one purchased a few hours later. But I cant fix something like that. I blame electronics. You use to be able to fix anything with a little common sense and some greasy hands. Now The only thing I can do on my truck is change the oil and air filter thanks to the 2" diameter wiring harness going to one of three computers under the hood.
 
and did some quick buffing
1937482_821608324563066_2076293275444543155_n.jpg


...restoring and rebuilding all the original parts is though very time consuming it's also very high on my list.
I agree it's time consuming, but like Doc, I take pride in bringing them back. My shifter needs some love. What did you do to buff out the chromed plastic without damaging it?
 
I agree it's time consuming, but like Doc, I take pride in bringing them back. My shifter needs some love. What did you do to buff out the chromed plastic without damaging it?


Just some old cheap turtle wax chrome polish, a very soft cloth, and a light touch.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
 

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