If you bought a Raleigh bicycle before the 1970s, it might have come with this:
Even if you have never owned a Raleigh, there's a good chance that you've come across the Raleigh spanner (or what Yanks call "wrench"). You might even have one. I did, for a long time. I don't know whether I loaned it and never got it back, or simply lost it.
Anyway, Raleigh wasn't the only British bike maker to offer a spanner. Check out this, from Claud Butler:
Like Raleigh's tool, the Claud Butler spanner has a hooked end for a bottom bracket lock ring. I am guessing that the
hex side of the wrench fit the bottom bracket cup--or, possibly, the headset. In the 1960s--when, it seems, the tool in the photo was made--if a customer bought a frame, it was as often as not supplied with those components.
Claud Butler is long gone, and bikes under his name, and Holdsworth, have been made by other British bicycle manufacturers for some time. CB also offers a line of tools similar to those of other bike manufacturers, but when Claud was still alive, they had their own discrete line, which were probably made by Cyclo or some other Birmingham bike parts company.
Even if you have never owned a Raleigh, there's a good chance that you've come across the Raleigh spanner (or what Yanks call "wrench"). You might even have one. I did, for a long time. I don't know whether I loaned it and never got it back, or simply lost it.
Anyway, Raleigh wasn't the only British bike maker to offer a spanner. Check out this, from Claud Butler:
Like Raleigh's tool, the Claud Butler spanner has a hooked end for a bottom bracket lock ring. I am guessing that the
hex side of the wrench fit the bottom bracket cup--or, possibly, the headset. In the 1960s--when, it seems, the tool in the photo was made--if a customer bought a frame, it was as often as not supplied with those components.
Claud Butler is long gone, and bikes under his name, and Holdsworth, have been made by other British bicycle manufacturers for some time. CB also offers a line of tools similar to those of other bike manufacturers, but when Claud was still alive, they had their own discrete line, which were probably made by Cyclo or some other Birmingham bike parts company.
I dropped one of those Raleigh ones in a box of bike bits just the other day, never throw anything away...
ReplyDeleteColine--Don't throw things away, and be careful about loaning them!
ReplyDeletegood job.
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