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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
I have an old bike that used to be my mom's. She got it in the late 60's/early 70's.
I have no idea what kind it is or what it is worth. If anyone would like to take a look at pictures, I've made a page available at: http://again.liquiddata.org/bike/bike.htm Any help would be appreciated. Thanks! Dave remove ns_ to email me. |
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#2
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 18:56:12 GMT,
wrote: I have an old bike that used to be my mom's. She got it in the late 60's/early 70's. I have no idea what kind it is or what it is worth. If anyone would like to take a look at pictures, I've made a page available at: http://again.liquiddata.org/bike/bike.htm Any help would be appreciated. Nice looking bike. Try doing web and newsgroup searches on the stuff that's written on it. http://www.oldroads.com/ may be helpful. I'd suggest putting some air in the tires; it will ride much better if you inflate them. -- Rick Onanian |
#3
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
Wed, 21 Apr 2004 18:56:12 GMT,
, wrote: http://again.liquiddata.org/bike/bike.htm Any help would be appreciated. The chromed cutout lugs and Campagnolo equipment would focus my initial search in the Italian pages he http://www.classicrendezvous.com/Italy/Italy.html It doesn't look like any of the Torpado bikes on the site. I thought it might be one of their production bikes from the early 70's which did have chromed head lugs. Any other clues? Thread sizes stamped on BB cups or shell? Any engraved or stamped names on lugs, stays fork end or dropout? Any guesses where was it purchased? -- zk |
#4
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
As the story goes, she was living in Philadelphia in the late 60's/early
70's and was dating the owner of a local bike shop. Supposedly he was one of the top sellers of something at the time and that manufacturer sent him this bike. A year or two later he got a nicer one and gave this one to my mom. She rode it all over the place for a few years, it has pretty much been stored hanging in her garage for the last 15-20 years, however. Used to have a Cinelli frame-mount pump, but that's long since missing, unfortunately. I'll swing by again tomorrow and get some more pictures of details, but there isn't really much stamped on it that I recall.. The handlebar stem is stamped with 'mod record' on one side and 'mm.75' on the other. As for putting air in the tires, I brought it to the LBS to see about getting it running again but they didn't have the type of tire it would have needed in stock and pretty much convinced me that getting a newer bike would be better for starting out with a bike obsession than restoring the older one right off the bat. Otherwise I would be riding it right now! Dave "Zoot Katz" wrote in message ... Wed, 21 Apr 2004 18:56:12 GMT, , wrote: http://again.liquiddata.org/bike/bike.htm Any help would be appreciated. The chromed cutout lugs and Campagnolo equipment would focus my initial search in the Italian pages he http://www.classicrendezvous.com/Italy/Italy.html It doesn't look like any of the Torpado bikes on the site. I thought it might be one of their production bikes from the early 70's which did have chromed head lugs. Any other clues? Thread sizes stamped on BB cups or shell? Any engraved or stamped names on lugs, stays fork end or dropout? Any guesses where was it purchased? -- zk |
#5
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
Wed, 21 Apr 2004 17:48:45 -0600,
, "Dave Eckstein" wrote: I'll swing by again tomorrow and get some more pictures of details, but there isn't really much stamped on it that I recall.. It is, according to its decals, a Di Campli Super Corsa. It could be a name the dealer chose for his bikes produced by a larger manufacturere or just some lesser known brand. http://www.sheldonbrown.com/vrbn-a-f.html -- zk |
#6
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so. -- Just another Ebay plug???
"Zoot Katz" wrote in message
... Wed, 21 Apr 2004 17:48:45 -0600, , "Dave Eckstein" wrote: I'll swing by again tomorrow and get some more pictures of details, but there isn't really much stamped on it that I recall.. It is, according to its decals, a Di Campli Super Corsa. Indeed it is, Zoot. Apparently, we've been had by a guy plugging his Ebay item. Isn't this it? http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...sPageName=WDVW http://tinyurl.com/2mhlr Even the story matches: "Nick DiCampli was the owner of a bike shop in Philadelphia that was one of the top sellers of cinelli bicycles. Because of this Cinelli sent him this bike as a 'thank you for your good work'. A year or two later, the bike was given to a girlfriend when Nick got a new bike." So my question to the original poster: Why play so dumb when you already know what bike it is and have already put it up for auction? And, now that I'm curious, why did you withdraw it from auction? |
#7
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
As the story goes, she was living in Philadelphia in the late 60's/early
70's and was dating the owner of a local bike shop. Supposedly he was one of the top sellers of something at the time and that manufacturer sent him this bike. It wasn't uncommon, IIRC, that smaller European manufacturers would sell in the USA under an importer's "house" label. I can't find any reference to DiCampli but obviously it exists, there's an interesting mix of components on that bike. The Stronglight crankset is pretty high-end, the derailleurs are looking like mid-range Campy out of the late Sixties, and Universal center-pulls were used nearly everywhere. Tubular racing tires of course, headset might be a Stronglight, stem obviously a 3ttt, bars probably Cinelli. No idea on the rims or hubs, hubs MIGHT be Normandy's or Campy, can't tell. Very nice condition if the frame is straight, well worth the work of cleanup and perhaps restoration, IMHO. The spokes are crap and I can't tell which rims they are. Overall it looks like a bike that might be equivalent in price to a $1200 road bike today, at the time it was probably considered the equivalent of a PX-10 and priced accordingly, say $400 in 1970 dollars. JMHO. -- _______________________ALL AMIGA IN MY MIND_______________________ ------------------"Buddy Holly, the Texas Elvis"------------------ in.edu__________ |
#8
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 17:48:45 -0600, "Dave Eckstein"
wrote: As for putting air in the tires, I brought it to the LBS to see about getting it running again but they didn't have the type of tire it would have needed in stock and pretty much convinced me that getting a newer bike would be better for starting out with a bike obsession than restoring the older one right off the bat. Otherwise I would be riding it right now! You may be right about starting with a new bike and restoring the old one after you're addicted; however, the tires are not a good reason to avoid riding this bike. Is there anybody here who can identify what's special about those tires? -- Rick Onanian |
#9
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
On Thu, 22 Apr 2004 08:10:59 -0400, Rick Onanian
wrote: Is there anybody here who can identify what's special about those tires? As someone else mentioned, a couple of very flat tubular tires. Evidently since that bike shop didn't carry them, the bike shop people felt they no longer exist in the world anymore. Curtis L. Russell Odenton, MD (USA) Just someone on two wheels... |
#10
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Help identifying a bike, please. ~1968 or so.
On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 17:48:45 -0600, Dave Eckstein wrote:
As for putting air in the tires, I brought it to the LBS to see about getting it running again but they didn't have the type of tire it would have needed in stock and pretty much convinced me that getting a newer bike would be better for starting out with a bike obsession than restoring the older one right off the bat. Otherwise I would be riding it right now! Well, they are both right and very wrong. This was, in its day, a fairly nice bike, but not top of the line. The Campy derailleurs would have worked better than most, but a $5 Shimano derailleur now would be far more reliable. As for the tires, don't bother trying to pump them up. They are badly rotted and will not hold air. These are "tubular" tires, and replacements can be had for $20 apiece, but they do require more maintenance than ordinary tires. In general, riding this bike would take some investment of time and energy. Many parts will have to be replaced (cables, bearings, maybe bearing cones/cups, spokes, saddle. Derailleurs maybe should be replaced also, although that might detract from its value. However, I suspect the derailleur is not original. Certainly the bike dates from the late '60s, but I would have thought that derailleur was mid-70s low-end Campy. I*may be mistaken on that, though. As a bike to be ridden, it would be like driving a 20-year-old car. It would have cachet, but would spend a lot of time in the shop. It has some collector value, but not a huge amount since it is an off brand. -- David L. Johnson __o | This is my religion. There is no need for temples; no need for _`\(,_ | complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our (_)/ (_) | temple. The philosophy is kindness. --The Dalai Lama |
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