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#1
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Serotta Frame. Eye Candy or ?
Hi, picked this frame up recently but don't know anything or history about it. Check out the lugs. Looking for any history or ? No serial number stamped on frame. It looks old-Please chime in. Thanks
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#2
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This is going to be a tough one to pin down. Fillet brazing of BB and TT suggest that it's a Colorado II, which should have had internal TT brake cable routing. Could be one that's been updated and repainted. May have been an employee built frame, which could explain lack of serial number.
Second look at the photos, surely a repaint. Is the top tube round, or is it oval shaped at the ends? Last edited by oliver1850; 07-05-2020 at 11:44 PM. |
#3
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If it's an early enough frame the serial number would have been stamped on the steer tube of the fork not the frame.
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#4
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If that was my size, light, and reasonably cheap I;d not have be able to pass on it.
But, What the fuss is up with the 1/2 brazed TT/HT lug?
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This foot tastes terrible! |
#5
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That's not a race number tab, it's a cable stop.
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The White Zone is for loading and unloading only. |
#6
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Yes, i see that now...
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This foot tastes terrible! |
#7
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I believe that's called "bi-laminate construction" and some builders today do that for whatever reason.
I don't believe production Colorado Concept frames had fillet brazed BB's. That, and the unusual top tube cable guide and lack of serial number incline me to believe it was likely built for an employee and not for sale.
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http://hubbardpark.blogspot.com/ |
#8
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The fillet brazing was done on early models with the new oversized and swagged Colorado tube set because there were no lugs that would fit the tubes. Serotta had lugs made just for the tubes.
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Cheers...Daryl Life is too important to be taken seriously |
#9
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This frame is a bit of an odd bird....it's either a back-door bike or a production bike that has been modified and repainted.
A production bike never would have been painted that way and it never ever would have had those cable guides.....and of course a production bike would have a serial number on the BB shell each and every time. If I had to guess it's a bike built by an employee with stolen materials and I personally would not trust it. The few guys who liked to steal parts and make bikes to sell mainly to Skidmore students were not skilled builders and there was no accountability or QC. They hacked bikes together with what ever parts they could get (hence the odd cable guides never used on bikes of this era) and painted them themselves of gave a few six packs or a bag of dope to someone in paint to paint it over the weekend. All too many bikes went out the door this way and they had most of the things that made a Serotta a Serotta but not all of them and they typically had no serial number. A few of these bikes were discovered when they failed (or had such poor alignment as to be unusable) and were brought into a Serotta dealer and that dealer contacted the factory. This never ended well. Buyer beware. dave |
#10
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That's interesting David. I would never have thought that a handful of employees would do that from a custom frame builder. Turds come in all shapes and sizes. Glad my Meivici is legit!
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#11
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Quote:
One decided he would start his own Ti bike company and built samples and prototypes using Serotta parts and labor and touted the work as his own. He was caught and fired and charges were pressed. A few others volunteered to work weekends (for overtime pay of course) to help the company keep up with orders but instead of doing the needed work they stole parts and built back-door frames and sold them to get the money they thought they deserved....so they got paid overtime pay to build bike of highly dubious quality that they then sold. Not a bad way to make some money. At least one of these guys is still in the bike biz I'm sorry to say. I'm NOT talking about Kelly Bedford or Dave Wages who were awesome employees and coworkers. These counterfeit bikes were most often sold to students at Skidmore College where the kids had deep pockets and the cycling community was very active...and of course those bikes went with the students and ended up everywhere when the kids went home. I could tell endless stories but they can't undermine the awesome work that the crew did. We had a skilled team of people who built some of the finest bikes money could buy and I'm proud to have played my small part in that. A few a-holes who stole from the place don't diminish that. dave |
#12
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Cool frame. There was a steel Serotta fork on ebay last week, that was probably long enough for that head tube...gone now
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#13
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Quote:
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#14
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I bought my Legend ti from a shop on Long Island that I don't think was ever a Serotta dealer. The bike had a serial # indicating a stock 60cm. but Serotta had no record of its being ordered or sold. I was told that it was a gift to a man on LI who was some kind of industry VIP who was given bikes by other companies too. When he was done with them he sold them through the shop that sold me my Legend. The bike was like new with 10 speed Dura Ace group and top-of-the-line Ksyriums. I loved the bike except the wheels because they got pushed around too much for my comfort when riding along the coast with the usual crosswinds. I replaced them with 32 hole Ultegra/Open Pros which were better for my riding.
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#15
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Thanks, Brian
Yeah, I wasn't really worried about my Meivici, I got it from Belmont Wheellworks. Has a serial number, etc. And a custom paint job just like the one featured in the '06 catalog. It's an awesome bike that I foolishly considered selling in the past. Never again.
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serotta |
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