Re: [CR]cromed campy. drop outs.

(Example: Framebuilders:Richard Moon)

In-Reply-To: <000801c52167$a1801100$a7ace218@gp.cgocable.ca>
References: <000801c52167$a1801100$a7ace218@gp.cgocable.ca>
Date: Fri, 4 Mar 2005 17:13:44 -0500
To: "ronald manseau" <letyron@cgocable.ca>, <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
From: "Sheldon Brown" <CaptBike@sheldonbrown.com>
Subject: Re: [CR]cromed campy. drop outs.


ronald manseau a écrit:
>Both front and rear drop-outs on my bike are cromed on their mating
>facings. Were they from the factory As this ,were they cromed by the
>frame fabricator at the time of the building or could they have been
>cromed afterwards the construction while still on the frame? I believe
>they are 1010s ,anyway campagnolo for sure and the frame was built
>around 1968.
>I would tend to think they got cromed by the frame fabricator as
>separate parts but then I wonder how they managed to weld (braze) these
>in places on the forks without seeing their croming affected by the high
>heath!?

No, the chroming is done after the frame is built. That way the chrome even covers the brass.
>
>Was the croming purely for the good looks or som

As one clamps wheels into the frame, the paint will suffer damage from the skewer and from the axle locknuts. The chrome is a much stronger surface and will resist such damage.

However, the chrome is also slipperier, so there's a greater risk of the wheel slipping forward under chain tension.

Chroming on dropouts and front fork ends was common on high-quality bikes before 1974.

In '74, there was an "energy crisis" and the cost of electricity rose drastically. Plating uses a LOT of electrons, so most builders discontinued this at that time. This was especially so in England, where they were coping with a long and bitter coal strike at the same time that the price of oil was going through the roof as a result of the OPEC embargo.
>thanks Ronald Manseau,Gasp?,QC.

Somewhere along the line, diacritical marks, such as the "e" acute at the end of Ronald's town are getting stripped out of postings. Is it not possible to enable 8-bit characters and thus permit correct spelling of words not in English, without opening the floodgates of HTML?

It seems rather insular to me to reduce everything to 7-bit ascii on a list that deals with so many European topics and names.

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