Midlife":m23qgaig said:
Looks too good to be a Falcon
. Maybe a Kessels bike which was a step up from the Falcon but below a "proper" Merckx. One or the other
Shaun
Hum Shaun , some belgian friends would be very upset by this comment
Apparently most of the frames Eddy rode were Kessels during the Tour de France,
Kessel produced cheap bikes but also high end one
here some info for the french reading obes
http://veloretrocourse.proboards.com/th ... es-kessels
from bike forum
Some inputs :
www.bikeforums.net/archive/index.php/t-769980.html
"This is not correct: Kessels without doubt built quite a few of Eddy's actual race frames - as did Pela, Masi, Colnago, Derosa ...
I stand corrected,
'On the subject of Colnago and Merckx, there's an interesting interview with Ernesto Colnago here: tinyurl.com/2kmqrf
He clearly says that he built his first bike for Eddy in October of 1970, which would agree with Eddy's claim that he started using Colnagos during the 1971 season. This would also agree with Brett Horton's list below:
"The following sets forth information, written in Eddy's handwriting on April 7, 2003, that I obtained during my visit to his home in Meise earlier this year." -- Brett Horton
1965 - Superia (stock bike)
1966 - Peugeot (stock bike)
1967 - Peugeot (stock bike) and Masi
1968 - Masi
1969 - Marcel Van der Este (Belgian builder)
1970 - Pella (or Pello) Torino, Italy
1971 - Colnago and Kessels
1972 - Colnago and Kessels
1973 - Colnago and Kessels
1974 - DeRosa and Kessels
1975 - DeRosa and Kessels
1976 - DeRosa and Kessels
1977 - DeRosa
It would seem that Colnago and DeRosa built the day-race, time-trial and track bikes, and Kessels the stage-race bikes. The famous hour-record bike was definitely a Colnago, the 1974 World championship bike was definitely a DeRosa, and the 1973 Giro D'Italia bike was definitely a Kessels.
(einde citaat)"