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HURET 1940s 'Suicide' Front Derailleur
#1
Example of Huret lever operated front derailleur. These were called 'suicide' shifters before that term was identified with down tube mounted shift levers when they came into more common use.

I am used to manually changing front rings due to not using a front derailleur on more modern bikes so this is safer than that method (easier too!). So far this is the earliest version I have seen of this Huret style with a couple of variants made into the mid '50s. I have yet to verify the year of introduction of this model, but the follow-up design has been found in advertisements/brochures as early as 1951, and I don't believe it was made prior to or during WW2. If anyone has information about this derailleur I would appreciate you sharing your knowledge for the good of all.

The unit operates similar to a horizontal rod derailleur except the cage sides back and forth on a fixed control rod as opposed to the cage being fixed to a rod with the rod sliding back and forth to change the cage position. Helical grooves in the lever knuckle interior engage two tabs on the cage as to affect inward and outward movement. The degree of pressure required to move the lever can be adjusted via two nuts which can be locked together after setting the the desired friction level on a couple of spring steel thrust washers. Horizontal and vertical alignment can be done via the clamp. Position of unit from the frame requires spacers if you need to set the max outward/inward position of the cage depending on BB spindle length and crank/chainwheel configuration

The cage is of a two piece open design. Lever and cage plates are made from nickel plated bronze; all hardware, clamp band, and clamp stud/control rod are steel. Quality is quite good with very little free play in lever and cage after years of use. Cage internal width 9mm; cage lateral travel 7.5mm. Weighs in at approx. 171g; not too bad considering with a more modern unit there is additional weight due to the shift lever assy and cable (cable operated vintage aluminum/steel high end FDs run about 90-110g sans cable, lever, and braze-on or clamp). Max ring difference is unknown; trying out a 53T/42T with an old Campy steel crankset so I'll find out if it can handle that set-up for starters.

   


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Take care,
Jesper

"I am become Death, the destroyer of bicycles." NJS
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#2
Cool beans! Never seen that type of derailleur.

Is there enough movement to for a clean shift between rings? Especially going from the small ring to large. I would think you would need the cage to have about 10mm runout for enough overshift.
Ride Fast, Be Safe!
Howard
  Reply
#3
(07-31-2021, 11:11 PM)Criminal Wrote:  Is there enough movement to for a clean shift between rings? Especially going from the small ring to large. I would think you would need the cage to have about 10mm runout for enough overshift.

Time will tell. My 60s chainrings are 6mm from centerline to centerline of each ring. Checked my 90s crank set and it is within .5mm of the older rings. I might be able to increase the cage range by .5-1mm, but still a pretty tight range. It may come down to how much difference I have between rings; I don't need to run a 42T, but I am curious to see if I can.
Take care,
Jesper

"I am become Death, the destroyer of bicycles." NJS
  Reply
#4
I was able to increase the lateral range of the cage to 8.5mm by adding a spacer between the end cap and the end of the control rod. I can increase it to 9mm if necessary, but any farther causes the tabs to disengage enough from the slots in the lever knuckle which affects smooth movement of the lever when shifting the cage inward. I think the 2 to 2.5mm extra range should be enough to cleanly shift between rings at 6 to 6.5mm spacing. Now to mount and test.
Take care,
Jesper

"I am become Death, the destroyer of bicycles." NJS
  Reply


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