Re: [CR] The Alex Singer on French Ebay

(Example: Framebuilders:Alberto Masi)

In-Reply-To: <c6ff64470901230820p1e05255esf4bc30f3541bf8cd@mail.gmail.com>
References: <355694.35008.qm@web44913.mail.sp1.yahoo.com> <a062309abc59f0859ac59@192.168.1.33> <68883C0C-F54D-49DE-8D85-E507EE2C38AC@cadre.org> <0c902a95aaea9202ce75a3e504f57aef@sbcglobal.net>
Date: Fri, 23 Jan 2009 09:04:16 -0800
To: Edward Albert <ealbert01@gmail.com>, Phil Brown <philcycles@sbcglobal.net>
From: "Jan Heine" <heine94@earthlink.net>
Cc: Classic Rendezvous <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
Subject: Re: [CR] The Alex Singer on French Ebay


At 11:20 AM -0500 1/23/09, Edward Albert wrote:
>Almost every Alex Singer from the 1970s onward has that system.
>I don't know about all 70's Singers onward. I have a 72 chrome one that came
>through Cupertino's and has no such front derailleur braze on pieces. Never
>had. If it did one would see the remnants in the chrome.
>Edward Albert
>Chappaqua, New York, U.S.A.

I wrote "almost every" Alex Singer, not "all." With custom bikes, you never should say "all," because there always are exceptions. I even heard a story about a full-suspension Alex Singer built in the 1980s for a friend, or something like that!

Bikes built for Cupertino _usually_ were specified for Campagnolo components, and I don't think Campagnolo braze-on derailleurs were common in 1972.

Does your bike have horizontal Campagnolo dropouts, too? Ernest Csuka shook his head, but Campagnolo dropouts were the hallmark of a quality bike in U.S. perception (when you read 1970s buyers' guides, they tell you to look for Campagnolo dropouts to identify a "high-end" frame), so Singer used Campagnolo dropouts on most U.S.-bound bikes. (A few French riders requested the same... see the exceptions above.)

Phil brought up a good point - I've always wondered what the fuss about Huret Jubilee front derailleurs was, as mine works flawlessly with a pretty large (16-tooth) difference between chainrings. But of course, mine is brazed-on Singer-style.

Jan Heine
Editor
Bicycle Quarterly
140 Lakeside Ave #C
Seattle WA 98122
http://www.vintagebicyclepress.com