non-fixie
Senior Retro Guru
As @Guinessisgoodforyou had already taken my bikes, I thought I'd get even and take his bikes.
I see you have the Challenge Strade Bianchi tyres on the Gazelle. I have them on my Vittorio now, and rather like them.Anyway ...
This thread is just to give you an idea of the bikes I own and ride. I'll be randomly listing those bikes.
My latest outing, a little over a week ago, was to L'Eroica in Gaiole, Italy. The bike I brought along for the event was my Eddy Merckx. Built in ca 1975 by Bernard Dangre's Starnord shop in Valenciennes, France, it is made with Vitus 172 tubing and quite a nice ride. I bought it as a bare frame set, and built it with what I thought might have been original, such as the (wonderful) Huret Challengers mechs.
Originally the lowest gear would probably have been 42 x 21, but as that doesn't get me up any of the Tuscan hills, I changed that to 37 x 28. Much better.
View attachment 894625
The week before L'Eroica mrs non-fixie and I spent a week touring in Tuscany, and for that I'd brought along a Gazelle Champion Mondial semi-race. Originally it had a SunTour 7 transmission and a Gazelle-branded SR crank set, but for comfort and climbing capabilities I replaced those with a Shimergo setup and a Gipiemme triple.
The original Bluemels mudguards were cracked, and were replaced by VO "aluminum fenders" (they're American, after all).
View attachment 894626
I see you have the Challenge Strade Bianchi tyres on the Gazelle. I have them on my Vittorio now, and rather like them.
How do the Grand Bois compare to the Challenge in your experience?
Sometimes they just choose youThis Huissoon came up for sale last year on a local bicycle trekking forum. Nobody there was remotely interested, it sat there for a while, and when te seller dropped the price to €100 and still no one responded, I decided to put them out of their misery and pick it up. The Daytona group set was easily worth that to me and I had been looking for nineties Campag stuff for a planned project.
I made the mistake of taking it for a spin around the block before commencing the tear-down. Dang! That is a nice ride! So now I had another nice bike I don't need instead of a group set I do need.
The Zeelander Jaap Huissoon was a pro rider in the late fifties and early sixties. Came 44th in the 1958 Vuelta a España at the age of 21. He hadn't planned on becoming a frame builder and bike shop owner, but after he'd built a bike for himself, friends wanted one too, and in 1974 he opened a shop.
This particular example is made with the rather typically-shaped Columbus Max tubes. It is a bit scruffy and the Mutant stem looks "interesting".
View attachment 895117