(11-02-2023, 07:57 PM)Sybian Wrote: Cool Frame! Anymore idea as to its history?
Here is what I have uncovered regarding this English marque:
Henry Lloyd was essentially a one man shop (his sister and some part-time weekend "lad" helped at times) established in the late 1950s on Meadow Rd in Netherfield, Nottingham. I have an ad for the shop selling Claude Butler bikes in 1961. He also at some point sold Falcon, Holdsworth, Knight and Paragon (from Andy Bone) bikes/frames. He was a staunch supporter of the local club(s), and later on the Clarion started awarding annually the "Henry Lloyd Cup".
Anecdotal evidence suggests that Lloyd did not build frames, and that frames bearing his name did not occur until the late 70s (unknown if before or after shop changed hands). In the late 70s Lloyd retired and the shop was sold to Mick "Chalky" Cziorka (spelling?), Francis Grafton, and Gary Wharton, who were all members of Nottingham Clarion CC (as was Henry). Then in 1980 Langdale Lightweights shop (owner Brian Green) opened nearby and Lloyd's had trouble being competitive (with a shop that was possibly undercutting their pricing and building quality frames on site); as well as having to support a larger staff which tripled after ownership changed.
Lloyd's shop was closed in 1986 with Mick eventually moving on to Freewheel shop in Nottingham where he stayed for decades.
Regarding the frame, it is still a bit of a mystery since I have been unable to contact the original players. It could be that the new owners wanted the well established Lloyd name put on some frames for marketing purposes and/or as awards for local events. Since the shop closed in '86 it would seem reasonable to assume that the frame is '86 or earlier (the frame stamp may or may not indicate a year of 1986). I have seen only one other Lloyd badged frame which is a track frame made with "Tange #1" tubing which was first available circa 1984. It is known that Mick built some frames, but unknown during what time (during time at Lloyd's shop, after shutdown/before joining Freewheel, and/or during time at Freewheel) he built them.
The Reynolds "Special Lightweight" tube set was not available for more than a couple years (introduced circa '78; changed to "Professional" circa '80) so unless it was made with an "NOS" tube set, its features would fit a late '70s- early '80s build if the serial number's "86" is disregarded as a build date. The drop-outs being Shimano "UF" model were available circa 1978 through the '80s.
At this point I can only guess the frame to be 1978 at the earliest and 1986 at the latest with the builder unknown at this time. I can only assume that this and other Lloyd badged frames are rare and may have only been made (inhouse, or contract built) for special events or customers. I cannot even find a set of decals from the H. Lloyd company (no relation that I know of) that specializes in UK marque decal reproduction. You do not find the Reynolds "SL" on many bikes so it makes it a low volume frame regardless of the builder/marque.