Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Cinelli, 1983


My thanks to Chuck C. for writing in about his 1983 black Cinelli. It is very much like the Cinelli Design featured yesterday except it does not have a gold badge. Chuck's Cinelli has the serial number 17 stamped on the bottom of the bottom bracket on the non-drive side.

Chuck writes, "Have been following the latest postings of 1983 Cinelli SC's. Well, here is mine. Purchased in 1983 from a shop in Florida. The owner stated he had receive 6 of the odd bikes, no chrome except the front and rear drop outs. It turns out the entire frame had been chromed and then sprayed with a translucent black paint. In the sun it shows well. This bike, as is the one posted, once had the black anodized Campy parts. Mine came as just the frame. In 1983 I dressed it with proper equipment for the time, Campy Super record, Cinelli bar and stem, Cinelli saddle, Fiamme hard silver rims with Clement sew-ups. Enjoyed riding it for 17 years but became very tired of downtube shifting and sew-ups. So, as you can see from the photo I have updated it to more modern Campy gear but trying to maintain the retro look, and love riding it much more.

The lugs on the bike are tapered paper thin, very well done, even for a Cinelli. This is my fourth Cinelli, 1965 SC, 1960 Pista, 1965 model B (still have) and the 83 SC. The story is that the first run of the year (mine is #17) were built for the year's trade shows and then sold as a entire bike or stripped down and sent to Cinelli dealers to sell. The 83 was a big transition year for the SC, mine still has the 26.2 post, three hole sheet metal lugs. Hope You enjoy another 83."

Photo: click to enlarge


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I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com

Monday, December 6, 2010

Cinelli Design, 1983



This black Cinelli is said to be one of six that were made, this one is number 5. The bike has black with 24K gold Campagnolo Super Record components. The badge reads, "Cinelli Design, September 1983, n 5".

If any reader has information about this bikes please write in.

The bike is presently for sale in Europe.

I invite you to contribute by sending in photographs of your Cinelli bike, illustrations, personal stories, and articles about Cinelli bikes and components.

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I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Cinelli Catalog circa 1983





My thanks to Dale, owner of Classic Rendezvous, for sending in this circa 1983 catalog. It's especially timely since the previous story was about a 1983 Cinelli Supercorsa.

Click on photos to enlarge, there is much to discover. For example, page 3 has the name of Italo Lupi on the margin; Lupi designed the "flying C" Cinelli logo in 1978.

I invite you to contribute by sending in photographs of your Cinelli bike, illustrations, personal stories, and articles about Cinelli bikes and components.

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I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com

Friday, December 3, 2010

A Confused Supercorsa, and Some History


This story courtesy of CINELLI (Gruppo S.r.l.)

A Confused Supercorsa

Last week an artist friend of ours wrote in with some photos of Cinelli track frame he had bought from Keirin Berlin (www.keirinberlin.de) on a recent trip . He wrote because several irregularities in the frame’s production (mostly the English threading of the bottom bracket shell) had caused him to wonder whether the frame was not actually a Supercorsa Pista but perhaps some export-only variant (such as the later Olympic and “Superpista” models).

There are in fact several “irregularities” in this frame which was produced in 1983, but they are full of character (at least in our eyes) and tell a shrouded, vague but fascinating story about a unique period in the history of Cinelli. In 1979 Antonio Colombo, having recently separated the bicycle specific tube manufacture Columbus – his brainchild – from the his family’s core A.L. Colombo steelery business, entered as a shareholder in the Cinelli company. He was allowed this by Cino Cinelli who had an eye towards retirement, and who as a long-time world-exclusive distributor of Columbus bicycle tubes had watched Antonio grow the business in recent years and saw that the two of them might have a vision and passion that could be compatible.

One of the first decisions Antonio took when entering the company was to change the logo, a “present to the company” to celebrate 30 years of business was how he sold the action to Cino, who was a little offended by the decidedly modern new logo (and the subsequent announcement of its implementation) Colombo commissioned from an, at the time young and upcoming architect, named Italo Lupi (legendary Bob Noorda also submitted a drawing which was rejected – “troppo triste!” explains Antonio, jokingly). Nevertheless the logo, unique in its style for the time, and probably the most widely imitated ever, was the singularly most modern logo in the bicycle world (which had at that point relied heavily on the traditional heraldic images for graphic representation of marques) was a concrete step towards the expansion of the company’s horizons into Italy’s then flourishing “design” industry – an attitude and style that has come to symbolise the modern Cinelli.

Nevertheless throughout this period production methods and designs remained more or less unchanged and Antonio brought existing products into a broader dialogue with culture through landmark exhibitions such as “Re-evolution: Design in Italian Society in the 80s” and began commissioning designs in cutting edge industrial materials already beginning to be applied in other sectors such as sports car design: of particular note the use of a particular rubber compound used by Ferrari in the Cinelli Domino stem.



In 1983 Antonio Colombo took greater control of the company and became the majority stake holder, Cino Cinelli retired but his son, Andrea, stayed on as President for several years, collaborating with Antonio and the designers and engineers on several nascent projects of the period.

What makes the frame in the pictures so fascinating is that it is amongst some of first examples of the new Supercorsa frames with the full graphic treatment as designed by Italo Lupi. Up until the early 80s the new winged-C logo had only been used discretely on accessories of various kinds while the graphic scheme of all frames remained in traditional heraldic “Cino Formula” style of 70s.

Several small details in this frame’s paintwork, such as the Cinelli logo raised above the legendary pinstripe line on the downtube instead of on it, indicate how early, in fact, this frame is, in the history of the new Supercorsa. The same may be said for the use of the wordmark so low on the seat tube – essentially always obscured by the crank arm and chainrings and never visible to the person not on the bike – a fact which Cinelli only got “smart” to a few years later.

The other particularly interesting detail on this frame, and that which perhaps the framebuilding connoisseur notices first, is the lug set, which is of the sheet type, rather than investment cast. The 3-point lug set on this frame is the traditional sheet style as found on all Cinelli frames up until this point. In the mid-70s Columbus and Cinelli both began investing in investment cast “microfusione” lugs, which had far more precise tolerances of lug thickness and the possibility to produce more exact shapes allowing for faster more efficient construction and somewhat lighter frame weights (for the period), but at the expense of a fascinating, more intimate, evidence of workmanship on the frame (as much of the filing and shaping work had now been eliminated). Even though this new technology was available Cinelli continued to use the traditional sheet lugs, and very special seatcollar lug and seat stay plugs made from Schaffhausen cast iron (extremely rare at the time). These were an industry standard bearer for their kind of precision in production, for all supercorsa models – preferring the possibility for flawless elaboration and “thinning” of lugs as well as the complete liberty of tube angles in construction. In 1982 Gianni Gabella, designer of many landmark Cinelli products of the period, designed a new set of investment cast lugs for the Supercorsa; these were a little shorter, with only two “points”. These would be followed, shortly after, by another set of investment cast legs, still used today, with even shorter more rounded lug - emblematic of the modern Italian “sport” style – the seat tube lug and fastback stay with inlaid pearl logo above the bolt, as well as the Cinelli “spoiler” bottom bracket shell – the first bottom bracket shell to significantly resolve the problem of corrosion caused by water residue in the bottom bracket area of steel tubes – a piece of frame building equipment which is still in production (and working!) more than 30 years later.Close up of the unique seat lug made from legendary cast iron of Schaffhausen:

This frame, then, belongs to a small window of production where many various elements of the Cinelli company and race bicycle production in general were in flux; all its irregularities, should one know how to spot them, are full of information and obscure, delightful histories.

Thus this beautiful frame, which sits astride two eras of frame building and two eras of the Cinelli company is a delightful ambiguous vessel of Italian cycling history (for those who care!).


Photos: Cinelli Laser photos by Maria Laub; click on photos to enlarge

I invite you to contribute by sending in photographs of your Cinelli bike, illustrations, personal stories, and articles about Cinelli bikes and components.

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I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

1972 Cinelli SC Leggerissimo









I started CINELLI ONLY because of this Cinelli (frame, s/n 5946) that I own. The previous owner, Rudy, is a great friend of mine. He acquired this special bike (as a frame and fork) from the Brugelmann store in Frankfurt in 1972. Through a lot of detective work I discovered its origins. I hope you enjoy the story.

This particular model , came to Rudy's attention through a description in a Brugelmann (of Frankfurt, Germany) brochure/catalog of 1971. Although he would have preferred silver (he already owned a 1970 SC in silver), this particular model was only available in yellow/red. Rudy also recalled a reference in the catalog to the use of lightweight Columbus tubes. So, he placed the order with Brugelmann's and waited nearly a year to receive it. He picked it up in person when he traveled from the USA to Germany for the 1972 Olympics.

I wrote to Manfred Brugelmann in 2003 which brought this reply, "In the seventies we were the biggest Cinelli dealership outside of Italy and because of our personal good relationship to the Cinelli family they were kind enough to manufacture those frames exclusively for us in the yellow and red special colour scheme." Mr. Brugelmann did not answer the question about the "lightweight" aspects of the frame. Side note: the Brugelmann shop was the cycling equipment provider to the German national team in 1972.

In 2004, with the assistance of another friend a letter with photographs was sent to Andrea Cinelli (son of Cino). Andrea Cinelli's reply includes this: "You are correct that the frame is lighter as we drilled the lugs and the BB shell for lightening, and my father, based upon the close friendship with the owner of Columbus (Aldo Luigi Colombo), had had special lighter tubes made. In that period, the two avantgarde Italian factories (Cinelli and Columbus), in the application of avantgarde racing bicycle technology (high resistance steel alloys) had to contrast the myth and image of the English Reynolds tubing." Note: the BB is a G. Fischer BB; it's stamped GF.

In 2005/6 another Cinelli of this type came to light. Like mine, it had the drilled out BB in a circular pattern and also did not have the Special Corsa decals. The owner of this second yellow/red Cinelli had some great news, he had a 1976 Brugelmann catalog! In this catalog two Cinelli models are for sale: Model Special Corsa and the Model SC Leggerissimo. I've had the model description for the Leggerrissimo translated (by the original owner of my bike no less ); the description is: "Special edition (manufacture) in extra light construction - in the accustomed Cinelli care - bottom bracket below open - detailed Cinelli lugs- Columbus tubing - Campagnolo dropouts. Color: This model is only available in yellow with red." The catalog price, for frame and fork, is 590 DM for the SC and 665 DM for the SC Leggerrisimo.

Now that I've seen the catalog (from 1976, the Leggerisimo still being offered) I better understand the letter I received from Manfred Brugelmann of 2003. He was stating that the Leggerissimo model was manufactured exclusively for them based on their (the Brugelmann brothers) personal good relationship with Cinelli. A very rare Cinelli indeed.

My friend Rudy built-up this frame and fork as a time trial bike in a typical configuration in its day, therefore the single chainring with straight block in the rear. The bike was also built with custom made titanium bolts, nuts, and other parts to replace the original, heavier, Campagnolo parts.

Photos: click to enlarge


I invite you to contribute by sending in photographs of your Cinelli bike, illustrations, personal stories, and articles about Cinelli bikes and components.

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I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Gintautas Umaras' Cinelli Laser


Filippo, from Italy, sends this photo of Gintautas Umaras, gold medalist in the men's 4km pursuit and team pursuit at the 1988 Olympic games in Seoul, Korea, riding a Cinelli Laser (perhaps made with Columbus SLX tubes).

Click on photo to enlarge.

I invite you to contribute by sending in photographs of your Cinelli bike, illustrations, personal stories, and articles about Cinelli bikes and components.

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I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com

Imitation is the Sincerest Form of Flattery

My friend Kevin writes, "Just saw an ad for the new "worldwide patent" Selle Italia MONOLINK saddle that you wrote about last year when it was just about coming to market (see here). It looks curiously similar to the early 1960s Cinelli Unicanitor saddle/seatpost system. Most notable similarity are the saddle rails. What's old is now new!"

The Selle Italia MONOLINK System:


The 1960s Cinelli Unicanitor saddle/seatpost system:



I invite you to contribute by sending in photographs of your Cinelli bike, illustrations, personal stories, and articles about Cinelli bikes and components.

Thanks for stopping by.

I can be contacted at veronaman@gmail.com