When people with lots of bucks buy a Ferrari or a Lamburghini, no one
says "why Italian?"
They know.
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When people with lots of bucks buy a Ferrari or a Lamburghini, no one
says "why Italian?"
They know.
My weakness is for Italian shoes.
Oh, and a certain young climber recently signed to the Discovery team...:rolleyes:
Mimi, if you do go with a local builder please let me know what you think of the process. My dream, assuming I keep riding, is to eventually have a custom steel bike. My fantasy is not Italian-specific, but I agree that there is something very beautiful about steel and that the Italians have been doing it beautifully for a long, long time.
Admittedly, I love the cache of custom steel, but I also know--after spending a lot of time trying to tweak the fit of my Bianchi--that it's likely the only way to get a bike that really fits me. Unfortunately, I will likely have to work with a builder over the phone. People like Carl Strong have wonderful reputations for walking you through the process. There are also builders like Serotta, Waterford and IF that have reps here in Indianapolis that do the fittings. Either way, it will require a leap of faith.
Anyway, good luck with it all.
Kate
Mmmmm.... Waterford.....:D
www.waterfordbikes.com
Reynolds steel (Waterford's rep Dave Hellekson told me Flossie was made of Reynolds 753 when he gave me her history)
Scroll down a little, and you'll find a nice summary of some of the Reynolds bike tubing.
http://www.worldclasscycles.com/JACKSON-HOME.htm
Mimi, I totally understand wanting the Italian bike. It's the same (but different) as how I felt about my search for my road bike. And then Flosshilde appeared! Miracles never cease...
Your bike is out there, and you will find it.
I'm just sorry Mr. Dumpster pimped that poor innocent Mondonico.
Chris Robinson is the best bike shop owner that I have ever known. He used to live in my house when he was getting his shop started. He is honest, smart, knowledgeable and will be helpful at all times. He is and was a friend obviously when we lived in California. I would recommend his bike knowledge and honesty to anyone. He will be able to answer your questions and if he can't he will find out.
Now, yes, he might be a big huge bike nerd now as Knotted said, BUT I remember him when he was just finishing being a VERY GOOD RACER and deciding to open his shop, and he was nowhere near as big. That's what a bike shop will do to you. He is knowledgeable in all areas of cycling.
Ooops! I didn't mean "huge" in the physical sense, I meant "huge" in the bike-nerd/loves-bikes sense.:o
(it was a compliment, as nerds and geeks are very cool in my worldview)
Well, it makes sense to me in certain ways, but maybe not in others. But that's OKAY- we all have our own special preferences, and that's good! I hope you will figure out what to do and that you wind up with a bike that truly suits you in every way- you DESERVE it!! :) :)
Hey Mimi- just to have closure did the bike make it back safely, and has your credit card been credited yet? Just let us know when its all straightened out. What about the wheels? Were you able to stop the order or had he already started building them? -e
Hey, Kate, do you know about Spicer here in Evansville? I'm pretty sure that they will build you a steel one. A fellow in my team just got one built there. He's probably 6'8" they built him a 65cm. But I'm pretty sure his is aluminum.
http://www.spicercycles.com/index.cgi
I am still waiting. What I know is that he DID receive the frame and "accepted it" but no credit to my visa yet.
Silver, thanks for the recommendation. I'll take a look at that link. On while we're on the subject, there's an interesting discussion right now on roadbikereview.com about building a custom bike. You'll have to register if you haven't already to read it, but it is interesting....
http://forums.roadbikereview.com/showthread.php?t=88441