Fogive me if I am posting in the wrong place. It has been donkey's years since I last used retrobike, spending my time on the youthclub that is LFGSS.
So:
I got this frame
It has a Cinelli BB (English threads) shell but other than that no other lugs, aside from the fork crown.
It has Campagnolo dropouts and track ends and a derailler hanger so I was guessing a road TT frame.
It has one braze on for a downtube shifter.
It is drilled both front and back (for brakes) but has no brake guides or internal routing.
The oddest bit to me; it has a grub screw to fasten the seatpost.
Tubing-wise, I am none the wiser though the seat stays look quite thick in the middle.
It has an inscription: P/R/A, C, M above the front brake hole.
From what I have been told:
and
Hence suggesting that this is a 70s Aende TT frame.
I was wondering whether anyone knew anymore about this as I would be interested to here it.
I can take more pictures.
As I said, if this is the wrong place please could you just point me in the right direction.
Many thanks
Hasan
So:
I got this frame
It has a Cinelli BB (English threads) shell but other than that no other lugs, aside from the fork crown.
It has Campagnolo dropouts and track ends and a derailler hanger so I was guessing a road TT frame.
It has one braze on for a downtube shifter.
It is drilled both front and back (for brakes) but has no brake guides or internal routing.
The oddest bit to me; it has a grub screw to fasten the seatpost.
Tubing-wise, I am none the wiser though the seat stays look quite thick in the middle.
It has an inscription: P/R/A, C, M above the front brake hole.
From what I have been told:
Track ends with a hanger and a single shifter mount, were definitely a TT thing in the Seventies.
This ties-in with the lack of cable guides: they were using band-on guides then.
Not really my era, but I'd wouldn't think there were too many people building lugless TT frames back then: the grub screw seatpost fixing is quite unusual and should make pinning down the builder easier.
and
Pongo / Aende never stamped any identification on his frames as he tried to hide his activities from the taxman, plus he never liked to use a chainstay bridge and always used shot in chainstays. He always had a rake to the fork that started quite far up. He went into Lo-Pro quite early on in the 80's.
Hence suggesting that this is a 70s Aende TT frame.
I was wondering whether anyone knew anymore about this as I would be interested to here it.
I can take more pictures.
As I said, if this is the wrong place please could you just point me in the right direction.
Many thanks
Hasan