Novarra steel cages from REI also have the long tabs needed with VO strap 
clamps (TA clone).  However, my VO straps rusted after 2 years, and I went 
to King Cage stud-welded hose clamps on two bikes.  

On Sunday, July 23, 2017 at 9:26:08 PM UTC-5, Steve Palincsar wrote:
>
>
>
> On 07/23/2017 10:14 PM, 'Mark in Beacon' via RBW Owners Bunch wrote:
>
> ...
>
> Are those the VO cage mounts? If so, what are the cages?
>
>
> Zefal Retro cages (the only ones I found that still had the long tabs for 
> clamp-on mounting) and NOS TA alloy clamps.  Seems the new ones you find 
> only fit OS tubing, which is curious because every OS bike I've ever looked 
> at already had brazed on water bottle cage mounts.  You can get the TA 
> clamps two ways on ebay: no packaging, no screws, ten bucks enough for one 
> cage; or, in the original paper envelope with screws, a hundred bucks.  
> Those are some expensive paper envelopes!
>
>
>
>
> On Sunday, July 23, 2017 at 5:27:56 PM UTC-4, Steve Palincsar wrote: 
>>
>>
>>
>> On 07/23/2017 04:22 PM, Lesli Larson wrote:
>>
>> Patrick- 
>>
>> As always - thanks for your wisdom. I'm definitely looking for functional 
>> vintage over spendy pretty bits. 
>>
>> The bike will be for serious rando so durability is an issue. I just 
>> don't like how most new/tech parts look so I'm always erring on side of 
>> shopping from the past where I can secure something that will look nice and 
>> still perform a job. 
>>
>> I'm very intersted in Shimanon derailleurs that you mention. I'm just not 
>> sure which vintage to target.
>>
>>
>> It's hard to go wrong with any of the Deore XT / XTR Shimano MTBs of the 
>> 8 or 9 speed eras, except for "Rapid Rise".  They all work wonderfully.   
>> And they index really well, too.   Hard for me to accept that they're 
>> "vintage" technology and I don't consider them so.  
>>
>> Friction shifting Hyperglide is all very well and good, and except for 
>> the lack of auditory feedback and a relentless desire to ghost shift built 
>> into its basic nature - in many ways better than friction shifting ever was 
>> back in the 1970s - but for a serious randonneur it's hard for me to see 
>> the point.  Indexing just plain works better -- at least setups with bar 
>> end shifters and 8 or 9 speed wide range cassettes -- and you don't have to 
>> fuss over it or concentrate very hard on it to make it work well.   
>>
>> It's one thing to set up a bike for Eroica-esque historical re-enactment, 
>> it's a whole different thing to set a bike up for randonneuring.  I'm sure 
>> nobody would suggest "vintage" bottle generators and Jos incandescent 
>> lights for real honest to god brevets; as far as I'm concerned it's the 
>> same for drivetrains.   
>>
>> Here's my latest (and also my oldest).  The frame happens to be from 
>> 1963.  The drive train is as contemporary-functional as it gets: XTR M900 
>> crank & rear derailleur, circa 2002 9 speed XT front derailleur (although 
>> just about anything including the Campagnolo Nuovo Record I took off my 
>> Paramount back in 1975 would probably work just as well), NOS 8 speed 
>> Shimano bar end shifters and a customized 12-32 8 speed Sunrace cassette I 
>> turned into a 13-32.   The range and spacing suit this frame very well, 
>> better I think than a 9 speed of the same range would do.
>>
>>
>>
>> The front wheel came off my VO Randonneur when thanks to Bosch's 
>> settlement on the VW Diesel Emissions Scandal I upgraded the front wheel to 
>> the lastest Son Delux Widebody, and the brakes are Mafac Racers Igor worked 
>> over and made as new.  The brake levers are Dia Compe aero levers I got 
>> somewhere and didn't even remember I had, probably came on my Alex Moulton 
>> AM.   I've got the parts but haven't finished the lighting yet - still 
>> recovering from the epic struggle of putting fenders on this bike.
>>
>>
>> I'm current running friction on my bike with a TA crank and XTR rear. Not 
>> sure about the front derailleur. 
>>
>> This bike has a compact double with a wide cluster in the back - 
>> requiring medium/long cage rd.
>>
>> I use the Tektro levers with the quick release button. I'd like to buy 
>> vintage aero levers if i can find one with the equivalent reach.
>>
>> I'm also looking for a lightweight handlebar that works for smaller 
>> hands. I use an on one midge bars which I like because of the short reach 
>> and wide top part. Most of the Nitto offerings are just too large/wide.  I 
>> need something with a shallow drop.
>>
>> Not sure if anyone is making lightweight classic looking parts (ala 
>> Nitto) for smaller/shorter cyclists (and women).
>>
>>
>> On Wednesday, July 19, 2017 at 3:46:39 PM UTC-7, Patrick Moore wrote: 
>>>
>>> Leslie: It all depends what you mean by "vintage." Some "vintage" bits 
>>> are exorbitantly expensive -- Dura Ace 7410 brake lever hoods. Others are 
>>> still very reasonable -- Shimano 600 levers. 9 speed LX derailleurs IME 
>>> shift wonderfully; are those old enough to be "vintage"? 
>>>
>>> 10 speed? 9? 8? 7? Fixed?
>>>
>>> And what sort of stuff. Racer? Mountain bike? Just ride?
>>>
>>> You can find on this list, on other lists, and on eBay, enough decent 
>>> non-current drivetrain, wheel, and other bits to build up a very nicely 
>>> working bike for far, far less than you'd pay for current, mid-level 
>>> Shimano bits. In fact, if there is a good bike shop near you, you may well 
>>> find bins and piles of abandoned 8 and 9 speed bits that work perfectly 
>>> well and that you can buy for pennies on the dollar. I know that I can do 
>>> this at 2 bike shops within 8 miles of where I live.
>>>
>>> My favorites, discounting my "style" affectation for 8-speed era Dura 
>>> Ace: old 8 speed XT derailleurs, cranks, and hubs and, even older, pre-XT 
>>> "Deore" 7 speed stuff, which may well have been the same stuff as the 8 
>>> speed XT, just with different name and slightly different appearance.
>>>
>>> FWIW, I'm a man (I deprecate using "male" and "female" instead of "man" 
>>> and "woman", and I hate using "gender" instead of the proper word, "sex" -- 
>>> nouns have gender, people have sexes, though only 1 each), but I have 
>>> small, elegant, but bigger than Trumps hands, and I really like the old 
>>> Shimano aero levers -- easy to reach, and powerful in the pull. I've not 
>>> used any Campy levers except the old Record non-aeros, and the Shimano 600 
>>> and forward aeros are far easier to use, IME.
>>>
>>> The beginning of a list:
>>>
>>> Hubs: 8 speed XT or 7 speed Deore or 8 or 9 speed LX
>>> Derailleurs: ditto
>>> Brakes: Mafac centerpulls are fine, as long as you don't use Mafac 
>>> levers. Shimano aero levers, it doesn't matter what vintage. Do use 
>>> Koolstop salmon pads, though.
>>> Bar end shifters: the Silvers are wonderful, but fragile IME -- I've 
>>> broken 3. I like the old SunTour Power Ratchets. I shift 10 using mine, but 
>>> perhaps 8 may be easier.
>>> Cranks: 3 of my 4 bikes have the old Pro 5 Vis; the 4th, for dirt roads, 
>>> has an old Ritchey Logic. Either of these, or the same 8 speed XT or 7 
>>> speed Deore. If you can deal with 52/38 rings (I did; I just started my 
>>> cassette with a Miche 16 t outer cog), the Dura Ace 7410 crank is the most 
>>> beautiful crank ever made, over and out, amen. It takes a 103 mm bb 
>>> spindle, though.
>>>
>>> I build my own cassettes from cogs scavenged from bike shops; where I 
>>> need a special outer, I buy Miche. My 10 speed "road bike for dirt" has a 
>>> cobbled 14-15-16-17-18-19-20-22-24-28 driven by a 42/28, with Power 
>>> Ratchets pulling a 7410 rear derailleur. A modern, Nashbar "Microshift" rd 
>>> would work better, but would't look as nice.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 3:47 PM, Lesli Larson <lesli....@gmail.com> 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> It's been awhile since I sourced parts for a new bike. I haven't done 
>>>> this since I ordered my custom Riv ages ago. 
>>>>
>>>> Use: randonneuring
>>>>
>>>> Question: what's the current wisdom regarding classic long cage 
>>>> derailleurs, front derailleurs, rear hubs (freewheel or cassette), 
>>>> seatposts and shifts?
>>>>
>>>> Have things gotten crazy expensive or is vintage still a viable 
>>>> alternative to new stuff.
>>>>
>>>> I'm sorry I missed out on the Riv Phil hub (what I have on my older 
>>>> road bike). 
>>>>
>>>> I already have Mafac racers, a TA crank, and a set of Campy brake 
>>>> levers in hand.
>>>>
>>>> I'm a female with smallish hands and shortish stature. I'm going to set 
>>>> the bike up as a compact double with either bar-ends or downtube shifters.
>>>>
>>>> Wondering whether folks recommend in the way of classic, duable, 
>>>> stylish, lightweight parts? New or old.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Let me know if you have anything for sale that might match my shopping 
>>>> list!
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>> Lesli Larson
>>>> Eugene, OR
>>>>
>>>>
>>
>> -- 
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