Go Back  Bike Forums > Bike Forums > Classic & Vintage
Reload this Page >

Gitane with weird fork

Notices
Classic & Vintage This forum is to discuss the many aspects of classic and vintage bicycles, including musclebikes, lightweights, middleweights, hi-wheelers, bone-shakers, safety bikes and much more.

Gitane with weird fork

Old 05-24-19 | 07:52 PM
  #1  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Gitane with weird fork

Anyone have an idea what these braze on are for on the fork? A custom rack, maybe?


vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-24-19 | 07:57 PM
  #2  
juvela's Avatar
Senior Member
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 15,369
Likes: 4,391
From: Alta California
-----

rack and lighting

note guides for wiring on underside of downtube

-----
juvela is offline  
Reply
Old 05-24-19 | 08:05 PM
  #3  
bikemig's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
Community Builder
Community Influencer
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 21,770
Likes: 5,675
From: Middle Earth (aka IA)

Bikes: A bunch of old bikes and a few new ones

Cool braze-ons for a front rack. That would be a fun bike to build up. Which model is this? I've never seen this before.
bikemig is offline  
Reply
Old 05-24-19 | 10:56 PM
  #4  
cudak888's Avatar
www.theheadbadge.com
Titanium Club Membership
20 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 29,003
Likes: 5,493
From: Southern Florida

Bikes: https://www.theheadbadge.com

Eyelets are for a front rack: https://www.imcdb.org/movie.php?resu...y=2&id=2149175

Pretty sure the other bracket is a light mount; you'll see similar stamped steel units or fork bosses on English bikes of the 60s (on the other side of the fork to correspond with left-hand traffic).

-Kurt
__________________












cudak888 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-24-19 | 11:00 PM
  #5  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Here is an old post in which [MENTION=61614]verktyg[/MENTION] provides extensive info.

Rare Gitane ?

This is the Gran Tourisme with eyelets for rack and light.
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-24-19 | 11:26 PM
  #6  
juvela's Avatar
Senior Member
10 Anniversary
 
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 15,369
Likes: 4,391
From: Alta California
Originally Posted by vintagerando
Here is an old post in which [MENTION=61614]verktyg[/MENTION] provides extensive info.

Rare Gitane ?

This is the Gran Tourisme with eyelets for rack and light.
-----

Very fine detective work to pull up that thread!

In looking through the catalogues discovered a somewhat similar domestic French model called the Federal.

1973 catalogue page -



-----
juvela is offline  
Reply
Old 05-25-19 | 04:19 AM
  #7  
bikemig's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
Community Builder
Community Influencer
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 21,770
Likes: 5,675
From: Middle Earth (aka IA)

Bikes: A bunch of old bikes and a few new ones

Originally Posted by vintagerando
Here is an old post in which [MENTION=61614]verktyg[/MENTION] provides extensive info.

Rare Gitane ?

This is the Gran Tourisme with eyelets for rack and light.
This is a neat bike. What are your plans for the build?

The catalog specs show the Gran Tourisme weighing in at 25 lbs and the TdF at 21 and 1/2. 25 seems like a lot for a Reynolds 531 frame but maybe the weight includes fenders and a front rack? Perhaps the bike is spec'd with a slightly heavier version of Reynolds as well.

Last edited by bikemig; 05-25-19 at 04:25 AM.
bikemig is offline  
Reply
Old 05-25-19 | 05:14 AM
  #8  
Full Member
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 403
Likes: 3
From: Malden, MA.

Bikes: 2009 Masi, 2014 Specialized Crossroads 1975 Schwinn Unicycle

The 2 upper eyelets, likely are for a rack. And the left bracket ( I guess) Is for a light. (With or without a generator)
TireLever-07 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-25-19 | 09:50 AM
  #9  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Originally Posted by bikemig
This is a neat bike. What are your plans for the build?

The catalog specs show the Gran Tourisme weighing in at 25 lbs and the TdF at 21 and 1/2. 25 seems like a lot for a Reynolds 531 frame but maybe the weight includes fenders and a front rack? Perhaps the bike is spec'd with a slightly heavier version of Reynolds as well.
Its on my CL for $85.
Seems like a good deal; frame and fork AND Campy "C" headset.
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-27-19 | 02:44 AM
  #10  
verktyg's Avatar
verktyg
 
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 4,034
Likes: 1,271
From: SF Bay Area

Bikes: Current favorites: 1988 Peugeot Birraritz, 1984 Gitane Super Corsa, 1980s DeRosa, 1981 Bianchi Campione Del Mondo, 1992 Paramount OS, 1988 Colnago Technos, 1985 RalieghUSA SBDU Team Pro

Gitane Gran Tourisme Specs

Originally Posted by bikemig
The catalog specs show the Gran Tourisme weighing in at 25 lbs and the TdF at 21 and 1/2. 25 seems like a lot for a Reynolds 531 frame but maybe the weight includes fenders and a front rack? Perhaps the bike is spec'd with a slightly heavier version of Reynolds as well.
The Gitane Gran Tourisme frame was basically a Super Corsa with some braze-ons added for touring. The Tour de France bikes from that era had the same frame geometry. For a comfortable ride, those bikes were no slouches, especially the 57cm and 60cm frame sizes.

BITD, production made Reynolds and Columbus frame bikes with sewups weighed between 21 and 22.5 lbs. depending of the frame size (some even up to 23 Lbs.)

Back before lightweight clinchers and clincher rims came along, 27" wheels could add several pounds to a "light weight" made for sewups bike - even with alloy clincher rims.

Add on the weight of the touring components and it's easy to reach 25 lbs.

[MENTION=404122]vintagerando[/MENTION] "Its on my CL for $85. Seems like a good deal; frame and fork AND Campy "C" headset."

Where did you say that you lived??? I'd snipe that in a minute...

verktyg
__________________
Don't believe everything you think! History is written by those who weren't there....

Chas. ;-)

verktyg is offline  
Reply
Old 05-27-19 | 05:26 AM
  #11  
Randomhead
 
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 25,930
Likes: 4,825
From: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
too bad the rack is gone
unterhausen is offline  
Reply
Old 05-27-19 | 07:11 AM
  #12  
stardognine's Avatar
Partially Sane.
 
Joined: Jan 2016
Posts: 3,559
Likes: 645
From: Sunny Sacramento.

Bikes: Soma Saga, pre-disc

Originally Posted by unterhausen
too bad the rack is gone
Yep, but you never know what the seller has in the garage. 🤔 I'd definitely ask.
stardognine is offline  
Reply
Old 05-27-19 | 10:38 PM
  #13  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Originally Posted by stardognine
Yep, but you never know what the seller has in the garage. 🤔 I'd definitely ask.
You are correct; always ask sellers, "what else you got? ". I cannot tell you the number of times I go to buy X, and came home with an additional box full of parts, another bike, a set of wheels, etc.
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-27-19 | 10:41 PM
  #14  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Originally Posted by verktyg
The Gitane Gran Tourisme frame was basically a Super Corsa with some braze-ons added for touring. The Tour de France bikes from that era had the same frame geometry. For a comfortable ride, those bikes were no slouches, especially the 57cm and 60cm frame sizes.

BITD, production made Reynolds and Columbus frame bikes with sewups weighed between 21 and 22.5 lbs. depending of the frame size (some even up to 23 Lbs.)

Back before lightweight clinchers and clincher rims came along, 27" wheels could add several pounds to a "light weight" made for sewups bike - even with alloy clincher rims.

Add on the weight of the touring components and it's easy to reach 25 lbs.

[MENTION=404122]vintagerando[/MENTION] "Its on my CL for $85. Seems like a good deal; frame and fork AND Campy "C" headset."

Where did you say that you lived??? I'd snipe that in a minute...

verktyg
So, what I am hearing....drop this PX-10 rebuild project, pick up the Gitane and use all the components from the PX10 on the Gitane. ahhh, you got me thinking.
If I come home with another bike, my wife...well she wont be happy. But, but....its not actually "a bike", right? I mean its a bike "part"..right?
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-27-19 | 10:43 PM
  #15  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Originally Posted by verktyg
The Gitane Gran Tourisme frame was basically a Super Corsa with some braze-ons added for touring. The Tour de France bikes from that era had the same frame geometry. For a comfortable ride, those bikes were no slouches, especially the 57cm and 60cm frame sizes.


[MENTION=404122]vintagerando[/MENTION] "Its on my CL for $85. Seems like a good deal; frame and fork AND Campy "C" headset."

Where did you say that you lived??? I'd snipe that in a minute...

verktyg
So, this frame does not have a "touring" geometry?
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 03:14 AM
  #16  
verktyg's Avatar
verktyg
 
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 4,034
Likes: 1,271
From: SF Bay Area

Bikes: Current favorites: 1988 Peugeot Birraritz, 1984 Gitane Super Corsa, 1980s DeRosa, 1981 Bianchi Campione Del Mondo, 1992 Paramount OS, 1988 Colnago Technos, 1985 RalieghUSA SBDU Team Pro

PX-10s vs. Reynolds 531 Gitanes

Originally Posted by vintagerando
So, what I am hearing....drop this PX-10 rebuild project, pick up the Gitane and use all the components from the PX10 on the Gitane. ahhh, you got me thinking.
If I come home with another bike, my wife...well she wont be happy. But, but....its not actually "a bike", right? I mean its a bike "part"..right?
PX-10s are a dime a dozen. I have a 60cm 1972 that I'd let go for $400 plus shipping!

Peugeot PX-10s seem to have been made with 2 different geometries in the larger frame sizes: 74° for performance and 72° for comfort. See [MENTION=185430]dddd[/MENTION] for his views on this.
[MENTION=404122]vintagerando[/MENTION] "So, this frame does not have a "touring" geometry?"

Gitane used what was considered classic French road racing bike geometries from the late 60's to the early 70's on their Reynolds 531 framed models.

That means that those bikes were designed for riding all day on poorly paved roads that the pros raced on in those days.

That geometry later was describe as "club touring" and other euphemisms for a comfortable ride with good handling, especially in 58cm to 62cm sized frames.

After 1974 many top model French bikes were built with what was called Italian Geometry - 74° angles and shorter wheelbases.

My Gitane Super Corsas and TdFs from the bike boom days are smoother riding than my almost identical PX-10s. Same thing with my Bertins, they ride smoother.

verktyg
__________________
Don't believe everything you think! History is written by those who weren't there....

Chas. ;-)

verktyg is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 05:31 AM
  #17  
cudak888's Avatar
www.theheadbadge.com
Titanium Club Membership
20 Anniversary
Community Builder
 
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 29,003
Likes: 5,493
From: Southern Florida

Bikes: https://www.theheadbadge.com

Originally Posted by stardognine
Yep, but you never know what the seller has in the garage. 🤔 I'd definitely ask.
Half of it is behind that Gitane to begin with. That pile of parts is almost more exciting than the frame itself.

-Kurt
__________________












cudak888 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 05:53 AM
  #18  
TenGrainBread's Avatar
Senior Member
 
Joined: Sep 2015
Posts: 2,707
Likes: 679
From: Madison, WI
Yeah I'd totally build this over a PX-10. More unique, more practical, and a beauty. Plus if you sell the Peugeot frame you'll come out ahead.

I have seen that type of bracket used with just a light, and with a bottle dynamo with light attached. A modern bottle dynamo like a Velogical would work great on that.
TenGrainBread is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 06:59 AM
  #19  
Senior Member
5 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2019
Posts: 528
Likes: 84
Originally Posted by juvela
In looking through the catalogues discovered a somewhat similar domestic French model called the Federal.
Several French makers, including constructeurs made a "Federal" model according to the specifications of the FFCT (Fédération française de cyclotourisme) which was meant to be affordably priced. I believe the Gitane Federal was only 531 main tubes, possibly straight gauge, not full 531. The bike in question looks like a butted frame tubes, forks and stays decal.
Kuromori is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 07:27 AM
  #20  
Randomhead
 
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 25,930
Likes: 4,825
From: Happy Valley, Pennsylvania
that's a really nice looking bike. Too bad some mechanic had their way with the seat tube decal.

How was the rack attached at the crown, brake mounting bolt?
unterhausen is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 01:48 PM
  #21  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
So, I couldnt help myself.....called the Seller (hoping it was sold) ....still available (2 day old post. I think Memorial Day had other potential buyers busy with picnic and family stuff. )
Went out and looked at the frame/fork. So, I asked "what else you got? "
Wow, was I in for a treat. Fella took me to the basement: Vintage Raleigh Pros, Colnagos, Moultons, Biachi Superleggra (x2 or 3), Willier.....on and on.....I never saw such a collection.
I will attached a couple photos when I get home. The Willier was insane; it was a glowing red....crazy color.

Oh...and I got the Gitane with Campy headset for $70 total.
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-28-19 | 02:46 PM
  #22  
clubman's Avatar
Phyllo-buster
Titanium Club Membership
15 Anniversary
 
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 9,261
Likes: 2,684
From: Nova Scotia

Bikes: roadsters, club bikes, fixed and classic

Originally Posted by vintagerando
So, I couldnt help myself and I got the Gitane with Campy headset for $70 total.
I was worried you were online too much when you should have been hightailing it over there. Good work, any straight 531 frame is worth a roll of the dice under $100. That one is intriguing.

edit straight meaning not bent.

Last edited by clubman; 05-28-19 at 03:43 PM.
clubman is offline  
Reply
Old 05-29-19 | 05:25 AM
  #23  
Thread Starter
Senior Member
 
Joined: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,858
Likes: 46
From: Connecticut
Originally Posted by verktyg
PX-10s are a dime a dozen. I have a 60cm 1972 that I'd let go for $400 plus shipping!

Peugeot PX-10s seem to have been made with 2 different geometries in the larger frame sizes: 74° for performance and 72° for comfort. See [MENTION=185430]dddd[/MENTION] for his views on this.
[MENTION=404122]vintagerando[/MENTION] "So, this frame does not have a "touring" geometry?"

Gitane used what was considered classic French road racing bike geometries from the late 60's to the early 70's on their Reynolds 531 framed models.

That means that those bikes were designed for riding all day on poorly paved roads that the pros raced on in those days.

That geometry later was describe as "club touring" and other euphemisms for a comfortable ride with good handling, especially in 58cm to 62cm sized frames.

After 1974 many top model French bikes were built with what was called Italian Geometry - 74° angles and shorter wheelbases.

My Gitane Super Corsas and TdFs from the bike boom days are smoother riding than my almost identical PX-10s. Same thing with my Bertins, they ride smoother.

verktyg

Do you know if the BB is French on this model?
vintagerando is offline  
Reply
Old 05-29-19 | 05:55 AM
  #24  
top506's Avatar
Death fork? Naaaah!!
20 Anniversary
 
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 5,529
Likes: 945
From: The other Maine, north of RT 2

Bikes: Seriously downsizing.

Originally Posted by vintagerando
Do you know if the BB is French on this model?
I'd bet big money it is.






Top
top506 is offline  
Reply
Old 05-29-19 | 06:13 AM
  #25  
bikemig's Avatar
Senior Member
Titanium Club Membership
10 Anniversary
Community Builder
Community Influencer
 
Joined: Apr 2012
Posts: 21,770
Likes: 5,675
From: Middle Earth (aka IA)

Bikes: A bunch of old bikes and a few new ones

Originally Posted by top506
I'd bet big money it is.






Top
+ 1.

Yeah I would have picked up this bike in a heartbeat as well.
bikemig is offline  
Reply

Thread Tools
Search this Thread

Contact Us - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.