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HeyYou

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  1. I met NIGEL from CAMPYOLDY at Eroica Britannia. Very nice guy. Had some amazing stuff on sale, but he's very, very expensive.
  2. Start collecting now, value is only going up, up, up and up!!!
  3. Have you seen the asking price for a complete 50th Anniversary set recently, even a used one?????
  4. Anyone know where I can find one of these?????? (other than on eBay) ALL I'M MISSING ON MY NAGO SUPER BUILD
  5. I'll take the PUCH, if it's a reasonable price. How much???
  6. Thanks. Yeah, I know his decals, but with the Rand exchange rate they are quite expensive. After quite a lot of searching and guesswork, Tyreone did a great job, now to find the courage to put them on the frame!
  7. Very, very lovely, but tooooo big for you, send it thisaway!
  8. British Eorosport showed the Giro in English. To find ITV4 and Eurosport go to myiplayer.com. Need a UK VPN to watch catchup, but that's easy enough.
  9. I've been off DSTV a good 3 or so years now, only really watch sport, series and movies. Just acquired a 'decoder' from Dubai (50Dhms, about R150). Hooked it up to my old DSTV dish & LNB, chose HOTBIRD AND PAS7 and searched. Came up with about 25 free channels. However, these are all religious and not something I was hoping for!!!! I've not adjusted the dish at all, so I'm assuming I'm receiving the same satellite that DSTV run. I KNOW DANGEROUS LITTLE ABOUT THIS, I KNOW HOW TO ADJUST A DISH, EAST, WEST, UP AND DOWN and using a compass. Anyone here know more than me and happy to tell me what to do, or if I'm just wasting my time???? Is there anything other than religious on FREE TO AIR?????
  10. During my wanderings yesterday I found: Before you ask, no money, going to ride Eroica Britannia and at R18 to £1, I'm flat broke! Look KG96, 57 c2c, with a mixture of Shim 600 TriColour and 105 components. Frame in fair condition, clear coat coming off a bit, but overall good. Probably get it for around R3k. De Rosa Merak medium frame, in good condition. Campag Record 10spd carbon in very good nik. Wheels Mavic Ksyerium (Race, I think). Overall nice. Guy wants 9K, I suggested R5k, as the frame not collectable. He seemed to accept that only the Groupo and wheels were worth much. So I guess offers around R5k. If interested I can send a couple of pics I took. Or, send me an email and I'll put you in touch, I don't want to be in the middle. cdstheboss@yahoo.co.uk
  11. I think the frame might be earlier, based on the cable guide on the top tube (generally gone by 85/86) and the single (that I can see) set of water bottle cage screws. Certainly after 83, because of the sloping fork crown. My guess would be 84/85.
  12. Couldn't get the pics in, but check Ray's web site.
  13. From Ray Dobbins Seems like no one really knows!!! ca. 1978 - 1980 ? Colnago Catalog These scans are from Mark Bulgier's site. I ran them through Photoshop to lighten them a little, and I resized them to fit the page. I also reorganized the order of the pages - I grouped the Mexicos and Supers and I put them before all the other pages. I think the catalog is from no earlier than 1977 because: 1. All of the frames use the newer style of head tube decal, which combined the "Asso di Fiori" (Ace of Clubs) with World Championship stripes. It is my understanding that this style of decal came out around 1977 or 78; and 2. All but one of the frames have the more modern recessed-nut brake mounting (I don't think Colnago used recess-mounting before 1977). I also think this catalog is from no later than 1981 because: 1. All of the frames except one use clamp-on front derailleurs (braze-on front derailleurs were introduced in 1982 according to Chuck's Campy Timeline); and 2. Six of the nine frames still use over-the-bb cable routing (this catalog seems to be from a period of transition as to gear cable routing). If anybody has a fix on the date of this catalog, or can narrow it down some more, please let me know, because this is very important stuff UPDATE: I've been told that the Colnago stamping on the chainstays, seen on two of the frames here, dates to circa 1981. If correct, that would make this catalog no earlier than 1981. The Mexicos Note the "through the chainstay" gear cable routing above. I'm not sure if this helps in dating the catalog, but this is the same kind of bike that was presented to the Pope in 1979. Also, this bike, like several of the others in this catalog, has a 4-hole front derailleur, which was introduced in 1978 (according to the Campy Timeline). Neither of the two Mexicos above have crimped tubes. This black and gold Super has a front derailleur with a straight band clamp, dating it, and probably the catalog, to no earlier than 1978 (again, according to the Campy Timeline - thanks Chuck). This Nuovo Mexico Profil may be the "missing link." It's hard to tell because of the white pinstriping, but I enlarged the image to inspect it, and I'm pretty sure the top and down tubes are crimped. The decals on the chainstays only identify this frame as a Mexico (not a Nuovo Mexico Profil), which may be the reason why some of us noticed that the "early" Mexicos (like the first two above), did not have crimped tubing, while the "later" Mexicos (like this one), did have crimped tubing. Notice that the fork crown on this frameset is fully sloping; the gear cable routing is under-the-bb; and there is a braze-on tab for the front derailleur. I believe that the Mexico bike on which Giuseppe Saronni won the 1982 World Championship Road Race was in fact a Nuovo Mexico Profil - check it out below. My Mexico - not a part of the catalog I've always called it a Mexico Oro, but judging from this catalog, I guess I should just call it a Mexico, as the Oro name is used only for the fully gold plated frames like the one given to the Pope. I thought my frame was a 1978 (don't go by the components as they are not original to the frame), but now I'm thinking it is a later original Mexico. Like the two gold-plated Mexicos in the catalog, my frame does not have any crimped tubes and takes a clamp-on front derailleur. But unlike them, it has under-the-bb cable routing (like the Nuovo Mexico Profil). Assuming that the catalog is from 1978, I would say my frame is probably a 1979 or 1980. UPDATE: The chainstays on my frame are not stamped Colnago, so going by the comment I received that the stampings date to circa 1981, my guesstimate as to 1979 or 1980 seems correct (so far). Anyway, back to the catalog... The Supers Well, there it is, a Super with crimped tubing! (That is crimping along the top and down tubes, isn't it?) I always thought that only later Mexicos had it, but I was wrong. This Super has the same paint/decal scheme as Saronni's WC Mexico. Take the "Super" chainstay decals away, and good luck trying to figure out if you have a Super or a Mexico! This Super has the traditional Colnago flat fork crown and uses a clamp-on front derailleur, while the Nuovo Mexico Profil has a sloping fork crown and takes a braze-on front derailleur. The fork tangs are also different. I guess these are things to look at when trying to distinguish between a Super and a Mexico of this vintage. (It used to be so much easier when I thought that only Mexicos had crimped) tubing! UPDATE: Not surprisingly, a couple of people wrote to say that to their eyes, this Super does not have crimped tubing, that it is simply the a dark reflection. I admit that I considered this, and went back and forth many times on my conclusion. In the end I decided it was not just a dark reflection. There is a dark reflection, but there is also a lighter stripe below which seems to be the result of the crimping. But it's a tough call and I can see how someone can come to the conclusion that none of the tubes are crimped. This is a more traditional Super, without crimped tubing, with over-the-bb cable routing, and with no chrome other than the fork crown - the chrome-like decal on the chainstay doesn't count. It also has the paint/decal scheme which I generally associate with Supers (although it was clearly also used on Mexicos).
  14. Five weeks to EROICA BRITANNIA!!!!! I'm riding a Willie Marx made Columbus slx, Shim 600 Tricolour equipped beauty. My son is riding my Guerciotti Record, 105 equipped. 100 to 1 on my son's waiting for me on every hill!!!! YoooHoooooo
  15. After many, many hours polishing and some (creative?) painting. Should I keep the yellow/gold or ditch it? It's for a Red Olmo, yellow decals, not yet finished.
  16. Now you have me confused! Steel Vintage shows almost the exact same as yours, stamped chain stays alles, which they describe as a Nouvo Mexico!!!!!! That suggests, assuming they know what they are talking about, that yours is 82/83 and quite rare .... same as mine!
  17. Man, that is lovely. BUT .... taken from CLASSIC VINTAGE WEBSITE This is about a piece of cycling history - a Colnago Nuovo Mexico from 1983. The Colnago Nuovo Mexico model was produced just in 1982 and 1983 before the Colnago Master was released. As the previous Colnago Mexico, the frame and fork are made of very light Columbus SL steel tubes. The top and the down tubes are crimped: the Nuovo Mexico particularity. The paint of this bicycle is a very typical one, the so called Saronni Red - a deep red color with metallic effect. This Colnago Nuovo Mexico is built with an original Campagnolo Super Record groupset with many pathographed parts: shifters, crank arms, chain ring and stem. If you are looking for an authentic hand-made vintage bicycle, do not search further! Love at first sight! http://www.steel-vintage.com/colnago-nuovo-mexico-classic-bicycle-1983-detail
  18. Edit: very satisfying
  19. Try building the wheels yourself. I've recently built my first pair, took me two days, about 8 hours in total! Made a few fundamental mistakes, but learned a lot and had to pay only R60 to have the wheels checked and spokes torsioned.
  20. TIG welded with NOTICEABLE welds, so probably American or Taiwanese. I don't think European/UK, although that fork looks suspiciously PEUGEOTesque! Possibly SA. Could be PRODUX, SA built ali bikes, from mid 90s, . Is the Cyclo Pro chain guard new, or has been on there since new? Rob Rudman would have been the owner when that bike was new, but Cyclo is now run by his daughter. It's worth asking if you really want your bike's provenance. In the absence of anything better, the answer may be in the fork markings, if you ever strip it! Sorry can't be of more help. edit: Produx maybe early 2000, rather than mid 90s, don't remember!!!
  21. Cool bike workstand Eppie, just wondering why it's not on the wall inside the house!!!
  22. Talking of HELLIUMs, I'm looking for a rear, if anyone finds one.
  23. Shimano cassettes (the cheaper ones anyway) are held together by metal dowels, peened on each side. It's easy to drill the dowels out to get the single cogs. You can then use the Campy spacers and any ratio you like. It then becomes a choice of chains, Shimano chain will give slightly better shifting (noticeable ??????) than a Campy chain!!!!
  24. Man that looks dodgy!!!!! I suggest you retire it to my bedroom.
  25. Around this time!!!!!!!
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