Excellent condition.??? Fully tuned up. I am the second owner and the first owner raced this in the 1970s. I think this is a model B. Georgetown Cycle Sports (Long Defunct) sold these. Top level workmanship and attention to detail.
If you were to order a modern custom-made frame from his shop I suspect frame alone would be in excess of $4000. Some notes from classic rendezvous below:
Albert Eisentraut acquired an appreciation of hand built bicycles at the elbow of legendary Paramount maker Oscar Wastyn in Chicago, and Albert, in many ways, is the dean of modern (post Korean War) USA custom frame builders. His frames, especially the famous "Model A" frames of the 1960s and 70s, had a special sculptural aesthetic and unorthodoxy in their shaping. This set Eisentraut bicycles apart from the European mimicry that influenced other builders at that time. Albert Eisentraut grew up with cycling in his blood.
Following in his father's footsteps, he began racing in 1955 on the Kenosha Velodrome. He gained an appreciation of hand built bicycles working as a mechanic in the shop of legendary Schwinn Paramount maker Oscar Wastyn in Chicago. According to Albert, Wastyn didn't teach him the craft, "More than anything, I learned from Oscar that one person could make a bicycle by himself."
Albert built his first frame in 1959 in his father's basement aided only by a frame jig that he machined himself. In 1969 he became a full-time frame builder, working for Velo-Sport in Berkeley, CA.
Branching out on his own in 1971, his clients include world class racers George Mount, John Howard, Mike Neel, Tom Prehn, Tom Schuler, Connie Carpenter, Miji Reoch, and Sheila Young.
Albert has also taught dozens his craft; his notable students include Bruce Gordon, Joe Breeze, Skip Hujsak, Mark Nobilette, and Bill Stevenson - making Eisentraut the American godfather of modern day frame building. Albert commented, "The only constant in my life is the forever changing bicycle business."
His sons now work in the shop, "if the frame has the Eisentraut name on it, an Eisentraut had his hands on it".
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