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Is there any information on Premier Cycle Works that was based in Chicago. I have purchased a 1905 all original and that has been hanging in a barn or garage since 1912. I am looking for sources or information on this company and the bikes they made.
The story I got with this bike is that it was bought as a gift for a couples young boy and that the boy died in 1912 and it was put up and never ridden again. I will have more pics soon. I have it in pieces to clean it up. I would like to find tires for it. The tires on it are hard and flat. I plan on leaving the original paint on the frame but may re-chrome. Thanks for the catalog pics. I agree that it may be a later year model. Family stories tend to get dates wrong.
John, this bike is great as-found. Are the tires 28"? I would be interested in buying the original if you plan on replacing them. You may want to rethink replating. The plating on that bike is great by TOC collecting standards. Should you re-plate please use nickel, not chrome. Chrome did not start until the 1930's.
John, this bike is great as-found. Are the tires 28"? I would be interested in buying the original if you plan on replacing them. You may want to rethink replating. The plating on that bike is great by TOC collecting standards. Should you re-plate please use nickel, not chrome. Chrome did not start until the 1930's.
They are 28" tires and they were hard as a rock and not salvageable without destroying the rims. Thanks for the heads up on the chrome... in a earlier reply to my post is a catalog copy that calls the chrome out as nickel
John, this bike is great as-found. Are the tires 28"? I would be interested in buying the original if you plan on replacing them. You may want to rethink replating. The plating on that bike is great by TOC collecting standards. Should you re-plate please use nickel, not chrome. Chrome did not start until the 1930's.
All that bike needs is a thorough, gentle deep-clean. Some light soaking in mild acid solution will do wonders to that nickel. I'll bet most of the rust is from pin-point tiny-spots that will all but disappear when cleaned. I actually prefer soaking my rusty parts in lime juice I buy at the restaurant supply store, I buy by the gallon. It's cheap and you don't have to pre-mix/dilute & worry about taking off any nickel (which can happen). But that bike is really worth a lot more and has such great potential you don't get often with a survivor like yours. It would be great if you posted more pictures to nail down the frame manufacturer, as Mead/Premier used several frame manufacturers depending on year and model. Serial # should be on bottom bracket.
I saw this one at a swap meet on Saturday, and a lot of broken parts JB welded together. I looks like it went over the continental divide couple of times here Colorado. Just thought I would show
They are 28" tires and they were hard as a rock and not salvageable without destroying the rims. Thanks for the heads up on the chrome... in a earlier reply to my post is a catalog copy that calls the chrome out as nickel
Do you plan on making the bike a rider? The hard tires are removable with a couple different methods. To make it a display bike or rider white Robert Dean tires are the most correct. If just a display bike I would advise keeping the original tires as they look awesome.
Do you plan on making the bike a rider? The hard tires are removable with a couple different methods. To make it a display bike or rider white Robert Dean tires are the most correct. If just a display bike I would advise keeping the original tires as they look awesome.
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