(05-14-2024, 06:09 PM)Jesper Wrote: OUCH!! I do not know Mr. or Mrs. Saunders, but I do know FUBAR! Hope the hubs are not as bad. That BB should not be too hard to come by especially in your area. I would expect a local shop would be able to help you out. I would assume that the main issue will be its length and offset, cups should be standard threading (did Brompton make their own parts?).
My friend's family had a couple Bromptons from the mid 60s with the small front wheel and larger rear wheel. Cool bikes, but not something I could ride at the speeds I like to travel. I picked up an old "Nealeco" folder with Bianchi badging from a friend that gave it to me because it was just too odd to ride for someone who rode standard road bikes all his life. Sitting in my garage right now gathering dust.
Yes, the cups should be standard. Axle length and protrusion on the drive side are critical, but due to differences between ISO and JIS taper, especially vs the fixed chainring cranks on the older Bromptons it becomes a bit of a dark art.
It appears the end of the taper on this axle is 12.7mm, which means it is JIS. A bit odd, perhaps, as a 1990 Mk2 should, I believe, have an ISO taper. Mixing them throws the chainlink out by 4.5mm one way or the other, which can play havoc with a Brompton.
SJS Cycles says the ISO BB isn't available anymore...
Of course, it's highly possible (probable, even) that a previous owner or LBS has fitted a JIS axle. Next job is removing the other cup...
That Nealeco looks cool!
BTW, mid-60s wouldn't be Bromptons. Ritchie only designed it in 1975, and I think Bromptons have always had 2x 16" wheels. Possibly, those were Bickertons?