I need a Bianchi expert. I am going to see this bike tomorrow.
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I need a Bianchi expert. I am going to see this bike tomorrow.
The owner told me it was mid 80's and all Shimano 600.
What can you tell me about it? What is a fair offer?
I very much appreciate your opinions.
Thanks
RFC
What can you tell me about it? What is a fair offer?
I very much appreciate your opinions.
Thanks
RFC
#2
Dropped
Well, it's not all 600: the brake levers are Exage, which were below 105. The rear derailleur also doesn't match the front derailleur, crankset and shifters, which appear to be the painted Tri-Color 600 stuff. The rear may be older, or some other model. Also, the brake calipers are much older than the Tri-Color 600 equipment.
Sorry, not much help on the frame. The Italian built frames usually command a higher price than the Japanese built frames, so look for a 'Made in ...' decal. However, any Celeste Bianchi usually commands prices that are irrational.
Sorry, not much help on the frame. The Italian built frames usually command a higher price than the Japanese built frames, so look for a 'Made in ...' decal. However, any Celeste Bianchi usually commands prices that are irrational.
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It is mid 80's. A midline frame at best. Should ride well, as 80's Bianchi's most always do, but nothing special. If you can get it for $200 or less and it fits it would be good one to upgrade with better parts. Or at least Italian parts.
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+1 to the previous comments, this might be a fine rider and worth upgrading, but I wouldn't sneer at those components, except maybe the Biopace rings. I don't know if Celeste was *never* used on any Japanese-built Bianchis, but this ain't one of the top-tier frames, so don't let the color blind you. I think the Ishiwata frames from this era were actually BETTER crafted than some of the mid-level Italian frames, but the ride's the thing...all should ride great if the frame's solidly stuck together.Since the tubing decal is missing, I guess the only dead give-away will be the BB shell threading...my advice: get it cheap, lose the Modolo stem (but keep the H-bars if they fit) lose the Biopace rings and consider losing the Univega saddle unless you love the feel of it...oh, and the plastic WB cages too, chuck 'em.
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I saw this bike two days ago. I was thoroughly unimpressed. It is a repaint, and appeared to be a low level frame. It has someone's initials (not the present owner's) painted on the top tube, and the tires are shot. The pedals are 105, with crappy plastic cages, the bottom bracket appeared to have rust (in AZ?) under the HEAVY coat of paint.
The other issues have been brought up by posters above.
The bike needed WAY to much work to make it worth more than half his asking price, at least to me, and it is my size.
I have three bikes that are much nicer for sale, and ready to ride, a Trek 510, a Panasonic PT-5000, and a 80's Rossin. I'm only a few blocks from the Bianchi, PM me if you'd like to see them.
The other issues have been brought up by posters above.
The bike needed WAY to much work to make it worth more than half his asking price, at least to me, and it is my size.
I have three bikes that are much nicer for sale, and ready to ride, a Trek 510, a Panasonic PT-5000, and a 80's Rossin. I'm only a few blocks from the Bianchi, PM me if you'd like to see them.
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just fuggly...
so are the other things I dismissed, the plastic cages and Biopace rings: there will always be somebody who just loves something, but these are a few of my hated things. In some cases they also perform as badly as they look, too.
so are the other things I dismissed, the plastic cages and Biopace rings: there will always be somebody who just loves something, but these are a few of my hated things. In some cases they also perform as badly as they look, too.
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IIRC those stems have a tendency to snap under the handle bars. All the weight/stress is
held by the thinest part of the stem.
marty
held by the thinest part of the stem.
marty
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#12
car dodger
wow...I had no idea there was so much modolo stem hatred out there. I don't think it looks that bad, except maybe for the black gap filler. The stem shape reminds me of a cinelli:
didn't know about the break potential though.
didn't know about the break potential though.
#13
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$75.00 tops. what is that a 19t freewheel? it looks like a poorly put together stab at some christmas cash, don't fall for it
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I don't know if Celeste was *never* used on any Japanese-built Bianchis, but this ain't one of the top-tier frames, so don't let the color blind you. I think the Ishiwata frames from this era were actually BETTER crafted than some of the mid-level Italian frames, but the ride's the thing
#16
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he's supposed to be insulted, that's his J-O-B. 50.00 is fair but I'm kinda a green fiend so I went for 75.00. why don't we all email this guy and beat him up on the bike and low ball him(poor guy) so when RFC calls him up with 79.99 he's all over it. I'm in, give me his address and I'll blow his doors off for you.
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If you cannot see either a 36x24 or a 1.375x24 indication on the BB cups, measure the width of the BB shell itself -- 68mm = Japanese build, whereas 70mm = Italian. The geometry looks like mine, which is a good thing if you want a fast, efficient, sporty frame which is not overly stiff or twitchy.
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Capo: 1959 Modell Campagnolo, S/N 40324; 1960 Sieger (2), S/N 42624, 42597
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"Far and away the best prize that life offers is the chance to work hard at work worth doing." --Theodore Roosevelt
Capo: 1959 Modell Campagnolo, S/N 40324; 1960 Sieger (2), S/N 42624, 42597
Carlton: 1962 Franco Suisse, S/N K7911
Peugeot: 1970 UO-8, S/N 0010468
Bianchi: 1982 Campione d'Italia, S/N 1.M9914
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I only wanted the wheelset, and didn't bother to measure the BB. I actually offered him $125 after hemming and hawing, but he said he'd donate it for a tax write off before he sold it for that.
John E what do you think about the treatment at the rear dropout? The front is no better, and IT IS A REPAINT with someone else's initials!
g-funk, He's a different sort of fellow that works for the DOD, don't think you really want to 'blow his doors off'.
Just let him sit on it , and unless a fixie dude decides he wants it (sell me the wheels), he'll eventually sell it to one of us at a reasonable price..
John E what do you think about the treatment at the rear dropout? The front is no better, and IT IS A REPAINT with someone else's initials!
g-funk, He's a different sort of fellow that works for the DOD, don't think you really want to 'blow his doors off'.
Just let him sit on it , and unless a fixie dude decides he wants it (sell me the wheels), he'll eventually sell it to one of us at a reasonable price..
Last edited by Old Fat Guy; 12-11-07 at 10:22 PM.
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For reference, two Bianchis sold recently that I was watching. A mid 80's Veloce frame with some components, no wheels, went for over $300 locally. A 93 Campione, (Made in Japan) with Tange Double butted Seamless tubing but RX100 components, sold on ebay for $385 (with shipping). Both were Celeste.
My point is Celeste sells for $$$. I'm not justifying it, but it is true.
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It's definitely a Bianchi. A low end Bianchi.
No tubing decals, no ID of any kind, and look at the lack of brazing at the dropouts.
Mismatched components, light action shifters, and filthy dirty. If you were to put $200 labor and parts into it you would have a $200 bike, IMHO, and it may take more than $200, when you factor in tires and tubes.
No tubing decals, no ID of any kind, and look at the lack of brazing at the dropouts.
Mismatched components, light action shifters, and filthy dirty. If you were to put $200 labor and parts into it you would have a $200 bike, IMHO, and it may take more than $200, when you factor in tires and tubes.
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Hi Guys,
After talking to John, I decided to take a pass on the Bianchi. While I would like to add a celeste bianchi at some point, I'm trying to be more discerning. What I'd actually like to get would be a celeste Pista. I think those were 2004 (?) And, with a cherry 1984 Miyata 1000 to work on and a beautiful red 1985 Trek 660 on the way, I've got more than enough to play with.
After talking to John, I decided to take a pass on the Bianchi. While I would like to add a celeste bianchi at some point, I'm trying to be more discerning. What I'd actually like to get would be a celeste Pista. I think those were 2004 (?) And, with a cherry 1984 Miyata 1000 to work on and a beautiful red 1985 Trek 660 on the way, I've got more than enough to play with.