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Cycling Weekly
Cycling Weekly
Sport
Luke Friend

A steel track bike worthy of an Olympic sprinter

TI Raleigh track bike.

Trevor Bull was a cyclist worthy of a special bike. The Birmingham-born track rider competed in the Olympic Games in 1964, won a bronze at the 1966 Commonwealth Games, and finished his career as a four-time British track champion.

The last of those was in 1975, where he beat Reg Harris to capture the Individual Sprint Championship. It was a redemptive win of sorts, as Bull had lost to a 54-year-old Harris the previous year. Bull rode for the TI-Raleigh team for several years before finishing his racing career in 1979 with the Carlton-Weinmann squad, and this is the bike he rode to success while at Raleigh.

TB on the bottom bracket proves the bike's provenance (Image credit: Future)

The frameset was built for Bull at Raleigh’s special development factory in Ilkeston, Derbyshire. Made using Reynolds 531 double butted tubing, it features both a Fischer track fork crown and Campagnolo dropouts.

The stylish ‘wrapover’ seat stay with its unique fluted fitting was the design work of Gerald O’Donovon, who was the director at Ilkeston. On the underside of the bottom bracket the initials ‘T.B’ denotes its owner.

The fork crown looks a little industrial, but remains stylish (Image credit: Future)

A frame of this quality needs components to match, and this is the case here. The chainset is a Japanese-made Sugino Super Mighty, with Bull using 165mm length crank arms. The bars are Cinelli’s iconic track model, 65, with a Cinelli 1/A stem to match. Bull’s saddle of choice was a Selle San Marco Concor Super, attached here to a two-bolt SR seat post.

Tied and soldered spokes were commonplace on track bikes for stronger wheels (Image credit: Future)

At 6’2” and powerfully built, Bull required a strong set of wheels. The Mavic SSC sprint rims are laced to Campagnolo large flange Record Pista hubs, with the 36 spokes tied and soldered for extra strength and improved rigidity. The tyres are 23mm Vittoria Competition tubulars.

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