We originally bought the tandem frame in the mid 1990s, when I equipped it with some classic tandem kit. As a consequence, it has a lovely retro vibe to it. We haven't used it a great deal after moving south from Dundee at the end of 1999. After the seatpin incident at the end of our 2024 cycle tour, our Thorn touring tandem was out of commission until the snapped seat post stumpt could be extracted. At that time it was clear that the Longstaff tandem wasn't a terribly forgiving ride, so I started making some changes. But first, the initial bike set up.

The original build

20250511 151116Frame - the frame was custom built to measure by George Longstaff from Reynolds 531 Designer Select tubing. I believe this means the frame is built largely from 531 but with some other Reynolds tubing, and a mixture of lugs and fillet brazing. It's a direct lateral frame, and has a limited set of braze-ons - this isn't intended for loaded touring, so no pannier mounts and no braze-ons for an Arai drum brake. It also pre-dates disc brakes by a few decades. The 'drainpipe' tube is a rather nice oval cross-section. The frame is a bit battered after 3 decades of service, but still looks gorgeous in its flam kingfisher blue.

Wheels - In the early 1990s, Campagnolo had a tandem groupset, largely derived from their mountain bike groups, and I sourced several components from this. The hubs, for example, are lovely high flange hubs with superbly smooth bearings, which remain so after all this time. Both hubs are 40 spoke hubs, and the rear is 140mm OLN, threaded for a freewheel and for a drum brake. I built them up with DT Alpine 13G-14G stainless butted spokes and Mavic Module 3 CD rims. By modern standards, these are pretty narrow rims, and I was using 25mm Continental tyres.

Chainsets - I bought a Campagnolo tandem chainset with 42 tooth chainrings for the timeing chain, and triple 52-42-34 rings for the drive chainset. 

Gears - A 7-speed Regina 12-21 freewheel - still going strong with Campagnolo Chorus short cage rear mech and triple front mech operated by Campagnolo Record 8-speed Ergo levers.

Brakes - Dia-Compe cantilever rim brakes. With two of us riding this bike, you do need a bit of care when braking as stopping distances can be rather long.

Saddles - Brooks B17, Narrow up front, Standard for the stoker. Our saddles of choice for long days on the bike.

Bars - Stoker bars are sometimes a bit hard to find, and I originally set the bike up with a set of sawn-off Cinelli drop bars. Not ideal, especially as they were too narrow.

Recent Modifications - improving comfort

Last summer, when we started riding this tandem again in the wake of the snapped seatpin on the Thorn tandem, we immediately noticed a couple of things. Firstly, it was a much quicker, responsive ride than the Thorn touring tandem. I estimated we rode 20 to 30% faster over similar routes. Secondly, it was a really rough ride, and there were some quite irritating noises that would start about an hour or so into a ride.

As far as I could tell, the widest tyres I could fit on the Module 3 CD rims would be 32mm. Still pretty narrow by today's standards, but I went ahead, choosing Continental GP5000 tyres. I've been running these at about 85psi. This made a massive improvement in absorbing minor road imperfections, and I think was the most significant change in terms of improved ride comfort.

I eventually figured out that the odd noise was from the cheap suspension seat post I had fitted years ago. I replaced it with a Cane Creek ee-Silk suspension post. I also replaced the cut off Cinelli bars with a proper pair of Satori stoker bars from JD Tandems. That gave a bit more clearance and better hand position for the stoker.

Many years ago, I'd replaced the 52 tooth chainring with a 57 tooth ring as I was occasionally using the tandem for races. That compromised shifting, particularly from the small to middle ring. I've now returned to a 52 ring. Not that locating chainrings with the correct BCD was easy.

tandem