Regrets
#26
Extraordinary Magnitude


Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 14,081
Likes: 2,135
From: Waukesha WI
Bikes: 1978 Trek TX700; 1978/79 Trek 736; 1984 Specialized Stumpjumper Sport; 1984 Schwinn Voyageur SP; 1985 Trek 620; 1985 Trek 720; 1986 Trek 400 Elance; 1987 Schwinn High Sierra; 1990 Miyata 1000LT
Like me.
__________________
*Recipient of the 2006 Time Magazine "Person Of The Year" Award*
Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
Commence to jigglin’ huh?!?!
"But hey, always love to hear from opinionated amateurs." -says some guy to Mr. Marshall.
#28
Senior Member


Joined: Aug 2004
Posts: 121
Likes: 1
From: Central Kentucky
Mine was a 1991/92 also. One of a kind as far as I could figure out. Three S's on top of the fork crown. Never saw another with that type fork crown. True Temper tubes.
#29
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 251
Likes: 0
From: Oklahoma
Bikes: 2011 ciocc san cristobal. 2008 seven odonata. 1951 condor m05. 1990 ciocc San cristobal 2012 cervelo s3. 2001 Colnago ct-1. 1990 Concorde Astore.
Still missing my cannondale black lightning. Sold it to a friend and he's not ready to sell it back. Bastard. He doesn't even ride it.
No, no regrets here :-)
No, no regrets here :-)
#30
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 166
Likes: 1
From: Indiana
Bikes: 85 Fuso, 86 Peloton, 84,88 Paramount
In 1984, I was buying a nice frame and I had it narrowed down to a Paramount or a Richard Sachs. I bought the Paramount, nice frame and I still have it- but would be totally cool to have a mid 80s Sachs.
#31
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2014
Posts: 1,726
Likes: 1
From: Northern San Diego
Bikes: mid 1980s De Rosa SL, 1985 Tommasini Super Prestige all Campy SR, 1992 Paramount PDG Series 7, 1997 Lemond Zurich, 1998 Trek Y-foil, 2006 Schwinn Super Sport GS, 2006 Specialized Hardrock Sport
I passed up a nice Waterford 50th anniversary Paramount being sold in La Jolla early this year in my size for under $1000. It was too similar in configuration to my Tommasini - instead of having 1 gorgeous Italian classic steel steed with friction shifting and not very wide range gearing, I would have had two - one Italian Classic, one American one. I have since used the same cash to buy both my Trek Y-foil, and my Paramount PDG Series 7 with a modern 9x3 wide range drive train. Not as elegant for sure, but each of these serves a purpose for me that the Waterford Paramount would not have - at the expense of the eye candy.
#33
Senior Member


Joined: May 2008
Posts: 10,106
Likes: 2,757
From: Fredericksburg, Va
Bikes: ? Proteous, '65 Frejus TDF, '73 Bottecchia Giro d'Italia, '83 Colnago Superissimo, '84 Trek 610, '84 Trek 760, '88 Pinarello Veneto, '88 De Rosa Pro, '89 Pinarello Montello, 'Litespeed Catalyst'94 Burley Duet, 97 Specialized RockHopper, 2010 Langster
Not riding for more than 30 years.
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Bikes don't stand alone. They are two tired.
Bikes don't stand alone. They are two tired.
#34
multimodal commuter
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 19,810
Likes: 597
From: NJ, NYC, LI
Bikes: 1940s Fothergill, 1959 Allegro Special, 1963? Claud Butler Olympic Sprint, Lambert 'Clubman', 1974 Fuji "the Ace", 1976 Holdsworth 650b conversion rando bike, 1983 Trek 720 tourer, 1984 Counterpoint Opus II, 1993 Basso Gap, 2010 Downtube 8h, and...
#35
Senior Member

Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 22,676
Likes: 2,642
From: CID
Bikes: 1991 Bianchi Eros, 1964 Armstrong, 1988 Diamondback Ascent, 1988 Bianchi Premio, 1987 Bianchi Sport SX, 1980s Raleigh mixte (hers), All-City Space Horse (hers)
#37
Senior Member

Joined: Dec 2014
Posts: 3,598
Likes: 329
From: Fernandina Beach FL
Bikes: Vintage Japanese Bicycles, Tange, Ishiwata, Kuwahara
I wish I still had my 68 fastback Mustang with the cobra engine that was an exact duplicate of the one Steve McQueen drove in Bullet. Boo hoo. I can't believe I sold it in 1981 for $2000. Damn...................
#38
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 1,538
Likes: 13
From: Hopkinton, MA
Bikes: 1938 Raleigh Record Ace (2), 1938 Schwinn Paramount, 1961 Torpado, 1964? Frejus, 1980 Raleigh 753 Team Pro, Moulton, other stuff...
"Things without all recourse should be without regret. What's done, is done."
#40
Senior Member


Joined: May 2013
Posts: 2,652
Likes: 3,334
From: Greenwood SC USA
Bikes: 2002 Mercian Vincitore, 1982 Mercian Colorado, 1976 Puch Royal X, 1973 Raleigh Competition, 1971 Gitane Tour de France and others
Selling a decal-less '73-ish Gitane TdF I had bought for $75 - had high-flange Nuovo Record hubs with tied and soldered spokes, and it was FAST, but I was pursuing PX-10s. That was a great bike ath handled well, and I shoulda kept it. What a maroon ...
Selling a c.1958 Raleigh Lenton Gran Prix that was box stock - the ONLY change was a replaced inner tube.
Biggest regret - selling the 531-tubed Raleigh that was probably an early Competition or not so documented Gran Sport. Had traces of lagoon blue and white under the many layers of housepaint and rattlecan blue, black and green. Nervex Pro lugs, relatively plain box crown, Huret tips and dropouts, no chrome, some minor dents - but it was free, plucked from a trash heap by the side of the road, and JUST my size. It even came with a set of Stronglight 93 cranks with a 42T ring someone had drilled. I built it up as a single speed, then it was a 10-speed, then a 14-speed, then a fixed-gear ... it was the perfect mad scientist experimental platform, it rode well, it handled bigger tires, it was stealthy, and it was just a great bike. Alas, in an ill-advised drive to simplify my life by reducing what I own, I sold it via ebay to some guy in Canada. I still miss that bike ...
Selling a c.1958 Raleigh Lenton Gran Prix that was box stock - the ONLY change was a replaced inner tube.
Biggest regret - selling the 531-tubed Raleigh that was probably an early Competition or not so documented Gran Sport. Had traces of lagoon blue and white under the many layers of housepaint and rattlecan blue, black and green. Nervex Pro lugs, relatively plain box crown, Huret tips and dropouts, no chrome, some minor dents - but it was free, plucked from a trash heap by the side of the road, and JUST my size. It even came with a set of Stronglight 93 cranks with a 42T ring someone had drilled. I built it up as a single speed, then it was a 10-speed, then a 14-speed, then a fixed-gear ... it was the perfect mad scientist experimental platform, it rode well, it handled bigger tires, it was stealthy, and it was just a great bike. Alas, in an ill-advised drive to simplify my life by reducing what I own, I sold it via ebay to some guy in Canada. I still miss that bike ...
#41
Senior Member

Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 3,904
Likes: 527
From: SW Ohio
Bikes: Puch Marco Polo, Saint Tropez, Masi Gran Criterium
I threw my Zefal "double shot" floor pump in the trash due to a gasket leak. It had 2 different sized barrels each with their own plastic gaskets on the plunger. I looked for replacements but never found any. About a year later was looking on French bike parts (Zefal dealer) website "XX Cycles" and saw the gasket kit available for $3! I was bummed because, that pump, when functioning properly could take a bike tire up to full pressure in like 15-25 strokes.
#42
I only have one regret. And it involves one of the most beautiful women I have ever known. Half Japanese, half Korean. A model.
And the most genuine, sweetest girl I've ever met, aside from my wife.
Long before I got married.
And an opportunity presented itself which took me completely by surprise.
First and only time in my life I was too drunk to ….do it.
That, I regret.
Not much else.
Bikes? Feh...
#43
Zip tie Karen
Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 7,005
Likes: 1,546
From: Fair Oaks Ranch, TX
Bikes: '13 Motobecane Fantom29 HT, '16 Motobecane Turino Pro Disc, '18 Velobuild VB-R-022, '21 Tsunami SNM-100
#44
Senior Member
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 1,538
Likes: 13
From: Hopkinton, MA
Bikes: 1938 Raleigh Record Ace (2), 1938 Schwinn Paramount, 1961 Torpado, 1964? Frejus, 1980 Raleigh 753 Team Pro, Moulton, other stuff...
Shakespeare.
Another of my 'favorites' from him, "There is the soul of goodness in things evil, would men but observingly distill it out." I just used that one not 15 minutes ago in discussion with a neighbor. Mum having her Masters in Shakespeare probably primed me
.
Another of my 'favorites' from him, "There is the soul of goodness in things evil, would men but observingly distill it out." I just used that one not 15 minutes ago in discussion with a neighbor. Mum having her Masters in Shakespeare probably primed me
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