Re: [CR]Ame brake hoods beg the question of general hood replacement

(Example: Framebuilding:Restoration)

Date: Sat, 11 Jun 2005 13:36:14 +0200
From: "renaissance-cycles" <info@renaissance-cycles.com>
Subject: Re: [CR]Ame brake hoods beg the question of general hood replacement
To: classicrendezvous@bikelist.org, Bianca Pratorius <biankita@earthlink.net>
References: <5410ea79cfbd2592fe5a7674bd749168@earthlink.net>
reply-type=response

India might be the ticket, I've been contacted by a few of these manufactures in India asking if they could supply us with some small parts, they said they could supply small runs if need so. My question to them was the Quality? Just so happens Campagnolo style Vintage hoods was my asking, and perhaps Campagnolo style brake shoes as well. If we can get the quality then maybe sometime in the near future we'll be doing something there...................For sure not the first place ''Country'' that comes to mind when looking for bike parts.

http://www.bicycleindia.com

Also!............We're looking into a European producer for hoods as well.

BC Baron C.........................And the gang!! Renaissance cycles, Eindhoven Holland.


----- Original Message -----
From: Bianca Pratorius
To: classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
Sent: Saturday, June 11, 2005 11:28 AM
Subject: [CR]Ame brake hoods beg the question of general hood replacement



> Ame brake hoods came out no later than 1986, although this was the first
> year I saw them, they very likely could have come out a year earlier in
> 1985 and I just was not privy to them. This makes them an off topic
> subject, but what is not off topic is that a serious limiting factor in
> the restoration of classic period road bikes is in-fact brake hoods. Many
> on this list have lamented the poor quality of Campy copy off brand brake
> hoods, and they are often not cheap to boot. This begs the question of why
> some enterprising company has not manufactured quality copies of various
> older brake hoods (dia compe, campy, dura ace, suntour etc...). Certainly
> these would be easy to make if one had nothing more than the old hoods,
> one could make a mold and pour some kind of substance (with or without
> lavendar dye) into the mold and viola, it would be possible to sell
> hundreds of hoods at $20 a pop to an appreciative public. I have three old
> bikes with either sub standard hoods or hoods that I paid dearly for (much
> more than $20) and no where to turn for replacements. If capitalism is a
> motivating factor in marketplace doings than I simply don't understand why
> this situation hasn't resolved itself.
>
> Garth Libre in Miami Shores Fl.