pwebb
Senior Retro Guru
I have weighed a 56cm lee cooper built 853 frame at 1.330 kg and 708 fork at 1.05 kg making that frame set under 2.4 kg . This is lighter than the all 753 sbdu frame I also built up this year.
For the absolute lightest Reynolds I believe 931 and 953 allow frame builders to go lighter still, however they are effectively unobtainium like the 853 pro T that was once used by pro teams. Like the posters in this thread, I have heard that Columbus record and various ishiwata tubes enable similarly light results but I would not count them as being mainstream available either. For us mortals I think Columbus and Reynolds are about as exotic as it gets and a huge step up from the average cromoly frame. I would say that the lugs and dropouts in the early 80s frames I mention above were filed right down by the frame builders and that has had as much of a weight reducing effect as the exotic tubes ( plus makes the whole frame look much more elegant) but I doubt they would meet modern standards of durability as a result.
				
			For the absolute lightest Reynolds I believe 931 and 953 allow frame builders to go lighter still, however they are effectively unobtainium like the 853 pro T that was once used by pro teams. Like the posters in this thread, I have heard that Columbus record and various ishiwata tubes enable similarly light results but I would not count them as being mainstream available either. For us mortals I think Columbus and Reynolds are about as exotic as it gets and a huge step up from the average cromoly frame. I would say that the lugs and dropouts in the early 80s frames I mention above were filed right down by the frame builders and that has had as much of a weight reducing effect as the exotic tubes ( plus makes the whole frame look much more elegant) but I doubt they would meet modern standards of durability as a result.
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 Personally think the weights from around the 50s are surprisingly daft light. Actual weight (what it includes / excludes) and published weights of complete bikes will be down to a bit of debate. Wished I weighed my own frame set to get a concrete number.
 Personally think the weights from around the 50s are surprisingly daft light. Actual weight (what it includes / excludes) and published weights of complete bikes will be down to a bit of debate. Wished I weighed my own frame set to get a concrete number. 
 
 ) and moreover the physical volume of the parts isn't much at all. Most likely even the steel stuff would be drilled / hollowed / sculpted out where it could. Hell even some of the brake cables are more like todays gear cables
 ) and moreover the physical volume of the parts isn't much at all. Most likely even the steel stuff would be drilled / hollowed / sculpted out where it could. Hell even some of the brake cables are more like todays gear cables 
 
 
		 What I find interesting, it's like the mudguard is supporting the weight of the (little) load. It almost feels like a distribution of load and weight where those skinny stays could only support a rider weight properly and no more.
 What I find interesting, it's like the mudguard is supporting the weight of the (little) load. It almost feels like a distribution of load and weight where those skinny stays could only support a rider weight properly and no more. I understand that Mavic weren't that bad at early AL stuff.
 I understand that Mavic weren't that bad at early AL stuff. 
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
 
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		