Sorry Mick, no pics, built it when I was at school from 2 old frames. The head tube of the rear frame was cut in half & brazed onto the seat tube of the front frame. The rear stays of the front frame were removed, the rear forks bent in and the lugs brazed to the down tube of the rear frame. Unfortunately, it was pretty flexible, but lots of fun, and when you're 16 you know no fear.Quote:
Originally Posted by journeyman Mick
I've since ridden a few professionally built tandems, and a good one is far better and easier to ride than my Heath-Robinson job. Christies in Melbourne used to build good ones. Alternatively, you can buy a tandem tubeset with heavier gauge tubes, to build one yourself. It's important that they should be pretty rigid, both laterally and vertically, otherwise steering becomes a series of successive approximations.