The Kalloy ones are OK as general-purpose replacements, but they're aluminum, not exactly period-correct for a 1950s bike. I'd like to find a source of steel ones, even if unfinished or just painted. I can get them plated.
Here, there are so many abandoned, old bikes that it would seem easy to obtain quite a stash of seatposts: just walk around town and pull the suckers out of the trashed bikes. Unfortunately, a lot of seemingly abandoned bikes are still in use here (http://www.nonlintec.com/ireland/ -- pix about halfway down the page), so the owners might get a little annoyed if one were to pull their seatposts. Admittedly, there is a well established tradition of stealing seatposts here on the college campus, but in spite of that, it's really not a good thing to do.
Of course, you guys in the US can just buy a bike at Wal-Mart, pull the post, and throw the rest of the goddam thing away.
Steve Maas
Dublin, Ireland
>Jerome or Elizabeth Moos wrote:
\r?\n>
\r?\n>>Anyone know of a source for straight post seatposts in a good
\r?\n>>selection of sizes?
\r?\n>
\r?\n>See:
\r?\n><http://harriscyclery.net/site/page.cfm?PageID=49&Category=185&type=T&SearchResult=yes>
\r?\n>
\r?\n>Sheldon "Pipe" Brown
\r?\n>Newtonville, Massachusetts
\r?\n>+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
\r?\n>| Love seems the swiftest, but it is the slowest of all growths. |
\r?\n>| No man or woman really knows what perfect love is until they |
\r?\n>| have been married a quarter of a century. --Mark Twain |
\r?\n>+-----------------------------------------------------------------+
\r?\n>--
\r?\n> Harris Cyclery, West Newton, Massachusetts
\r?\n> Phone 617-244-9772 FAX 617-244-1041
\r?\n> http://harriscyclery.com
\r?\n> Hard-to-find parts shipped Worldwide
\r?\n> http://captainbike.com
\r?\n> Useful articles about bicycles and cycling
\r?\n> http://sheldonbrown.com