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Afternoon all,
I have an old 1995 Stumjumper that I was trying to sell.. which it didn’t.
So I was thinking of having some rear disc mounts welded on to the frame and swapping the old forks for a carbon rigid with disc mounts to enable the old cantilever brakes to be ditched.
Is there anywhere a bit closer to home here in sunny Dundee than Argos cycles etc that does this?
ben cooper @ kinetics in glasgow perhaps.
Shand cycles?
Do you have a spoon to hand?
There used to be various adapters that could be used.
Have you looked at those?
There are others that transfer the load up to the canti mount as well.
Did you try selling it on retrobike?
I wouldn't bother. Frames of that vintage weren't built to take the strains of a rear disc brake. Dropouts are small and seatstays tend to be very slim where they meet the dropout.
Disc up front and rear v-brake should give plenty of braking power.
The cost of the conversion and effort involved is probably not worth it. Given that you were trying to sell I take it there is no emotional attachment. A Stumpy will always sell, were you pitching it a bit high? Also any modern fork like the carbon ones you mentioned might rake the front out and you end up with a bit of a pig.
There should be plenty nice 26" steel bikes out there for not much money. Disk conversion might run to £50/60. Refinishing at least £20. Carbon forks around a ton? Then disk brakes and wheels another ton? A 95 Stumpy in fair condition should reach a couple of hundred depending on the 'upgrades'.
I might add I got round this problem by using a Sturmey-Archer drum brake for the rear. Plenty power as a rear brake, and no rim wear.
If you want a 1 1/8th non-suspension corrected steel disc brake fork I have one from a Carrera Subway kicking about in the garage somewhere that I could let go for a pretty nominal fee!
The canti mounted adaptors would definitely be fine, others should still be fine to take a disc as they'll have something to spread the torque a little at least.
That said, others might have a point that maybe selling it for less could be a good idea.
I was asking £200 which I don’t think was overly excessive for a well restored Stumpy, it had Rhond forks, USE seatpost and full LX and I put Exotic carbon bars on it for some added comfort, also put a charge spoon saddle on it as the old one was wrecked.
I was thinking it may not be worth doing, it won’t be used for anything other than towpath rides band maybe the odd jaunt round the local woods etc which are far from hard work. Just fancied the reliability of disc brakes.
But I’m guessing by the time I buy wheels, brakes and pay for the conversion I could have a more modern frame and just swap what I can over.
I looked at something similar for a pre disk tandem and opted for magura hydraulics as a half way house. They still work really well
Ah never thought of that. I’ll have a look and see what I can come up with.
Hmmmm! Not sure if I still have an adapter for a Rockhopper to disc, I'll take a look tomorrow.
to the poster above -- "the-muffin-man" - one reason I despair of getting my two 1990s bikes out, one a Kilaeua, one a '98 alloy M2 - they both have disc brakes up front, but in the glaur of winter, when SS should come into its own, I resent and wince going through the mud and hearing the rim, / braking surface getting a good grinding...
I resent and wince going through the mud and hearing the rim, / braking surface getting a good grinding…
..better that than the sound of a rear drop-out separating itself from the chainstays! 🙂
My old bonty (converted by previous owner) survived without issue.
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I wouldn’t bother. Frames of that vintage weren’t built to take the strains of a rear disc brake. Dropouts are small and seatstays tend to be very slim where they meet the dropout.
I've got a '99 dekerf. V brakes, Slim stays and dinky dropouts. After thinking carefully about this:
I’m guessing by the time I buy wheels, brakes and pay for the conversion I could have a more modern frame and just swap what I can over.
which is a very good point indeed, I went and did it anyway. It was expensive, but I'm delighted with it. still delighted 5 years later. The frame contains actual magic, and I never even put the Reynolds sticker on. And I can get a 2.4 in the back no bother at all, rather than having to deflate anything bigger than a 2.0 to get it past the brake blocks.
I’m guessing by the time I buy wheels, brakes and pay for the conversion I could have a more modern frame and just swap what I can over.
You could probably buy a late 26in complete full sus bike, yeah.

