Pictures please and/or a link. The old Raleigh 3 speed might have been a Lenton model (four speed?) and they came with drop handlebars and (steel) 26 x 1&1/4 wheels. (For a Raleigh catalogue of the period see: https://threespeedhub.com/wp-content/up ... 940-UK.pdf ). (Edit. It wasn’t the Lenton model.) The standard Raleigh might have come with fatter wheels and tyres as referenced in my earlier posts. Whatever, it’d be interesting to see the machine and have more detail of his route. I think that the early RSF guys knew how to get the best out of what kit they had, they likely ensured that it was particularly well put together, and they did walk some stuff too.Nearholmer wrote: 8 Jun 2025, 7:27pm Just seen a posting on another group wherein a chap describes his 99 mile gravel tour around and over the top of the White Horse, including nearly 5000ft of climbing, and an overnight camp, on an old Raleigh 3sp (looks c1940s) fitted with old-type drop handlebars, and traditional luggage, undertaken over the past two days. The pictures honestly look like a 1950s RSF expedition!
https://thewhitehorseround.uk/
The riding is a 50/50 mix of byways and backroads, and along the way it’s possible to pass, or spot, up to six white horse hill figures, which are something of a Wiltshire speciality. There’s also stone circles, hill forts, long barrows, Roman roads, ancient fortifications, and many beautiful villages.
The White Horse Round is a 117 mile self-guided gravel cycling route for experienced cyclists, with about 5,500ft of climbing. An ideal start point is Bradford-on-Avon in Wiltshire, but as it’s a circular route you can start where you like on it – Devizes, Swindon, Bath and Kemble (near Cirencester) work particularly well, with most of those accessible by rail.
The route is mostly on quiet unclassified and B-roads, gravel and loose stone tracks, off-road doubletrack (from fast-flowing to rough), and a small amount of singletrack. It’s a ‘gravel’ route, well-suited to a rigid drop-bar cyclocross-style bike, but adventurous in nature, sometimes briefly straying into mountain bike territory. You will encounter boneshaking hardpack, steep gradients (both up and down), rutted sections, and some long ridge sections that are exposed to the elements.
Roads make up approximately 50% of the route and are nearly all quiet, remote, or pass through small towns and villages in 30mph limits. Main roads are crossed in a few places, but no time is actually spent on them.