The Most I Ever Paid For A Vintage Bike...
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The Most I Ever Paid For A Vintage Bike...
After being given three bikes, this summer, and purchasing another for just a few dollars, I set a new record for myself. This full Campy Marinoni, purchased today after two months of "should I or shouldn't I", I finally caved in. The bike is little ridden (an interesting story in itself) and in perfect working condition (the original pantographed fork was included in the purchase and will be installed at first chance). Anyway, that "boy did this cost a lot", got me to thinking...
Without reporting actual $$$ spent, which of your steeds, still with you or passed on for one reason or another, cost you the most in dollars and cents? Just which one cost the most the day you forked over the cash, not what you spent initially and after restoration. Anyway, this one set me back more than I have ever paid before for a vintage bicycle and I doubt that I will ever pay this much again...
Without reporting actual $$$ spent, which of your steeds, still with you or passed on for one reason or another, cost you the most in dollars and cents? Just which one cost the most the day you forked over the cash, not what you spent initially and after restoration. Anyway, this one set me back more than I have ever paid before for a vintage bicycle and I doubt that I will ever pay this much again...
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@randyjawa
Excellent choice for stepping up, the 2 frames I have were absolute bargains making them all the more worthwhile, fantastic, great work getting this.
Excellent choice for stepping up, the 2 frames I have were absolute bargains making them all the more worthwhile, fantastic, great work getting this.
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Colnago still sells this "vintage" frameset brand new. Ordered this around 3 years ago, took a full year (to the day!) to get. So this is my most expensive C+V (in the spirit of) singular purchase cost-wise. The second biggest singular expense was probably a Cyclart paint job (still overpriced even by today's prices, it was $900.00 twenty years ago).
Modern bikes? You don't want to know. We have it good in C+V land.
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Beautiful bike, Randy. I can see why you bought it.
My own most expensive acquisition was a bike I wasn't looking for, and certainly one I did not need. At all. But it is such an amazing piece of bicycle design and in such a nice condition I just had to have it.
My own most expensive acquisition was a bike I wasn't looking for, and certainly one I did not need. At all. But it is such an amazing piece of bicycle design and in such a nice condition I just had to have it.
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Nice idea for a thread.
The most ever up-front cost for me was for my '79 Raleight SBDU Team Pro. I was volunteering at the local co-op when it was donated. I called dibs. The co-op folks got back to me a week later saying I could take it for $400. It was complete, but it took me a while to replace some of the non-NR components. I didn't take any before pics, but it's not far off:
The most ever up-front cost for me was for my '79 Raleight SBDU Team Pro. I was volunteering at the local co-op when it was donated. I called dibs. The co-op folks got back to me a week later saying I could take it for $400. It was complete, but it took me a while to replace some of the non-NR components. I didn't take any before pics, but it's not far off:
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Not going to boast, I was happy twice where I was willing to pay and had set a huge proxy bid that was twice my final winning bid.
‘and one time where I did bid a crazy sum in a NZ auction for a Masi Special. I won in the basic time, but the competition kept bidding, two minutes had to lapse without another bid for the auction to end.
‘the price went up another $1,400 US as the other bidder just kept pinging. he won and I was happy to have lost.
‘and one time where I did bid a crazy sum in a NZ auction for a Masi Special. I won in the basic time, but the competition kept bidding, two minutes had to lapse without another bid for the auction to end.
‘the price went up another $1,400 US as the other bidder just kept pinging. he won and I was happy to have lost.
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The most I've spent on a vintage bike was for this 1974 Masi Gran Criterium.
I had an idea that I was overpaying at the time. The seller was terminally ill and trying to settle his affairs in advance, and I had the money so I chose not to haggle on the price. I paid about the current MSRP of a Surly Disc Trucker. I have no regrets about it whatsoever.
I had an idea that I was overpaying at the time. The seller was terminally ill and trying to settle his affairs in advance, and I had the money so I chose not to haggle on the price. I paid about the current MSRP of a Surly Disc Trucker. I have no regrets about it whatsoever.
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These were about the same amount but the Masi was as a frame only - ordered by me at the Vigorelli velodrome in 2010 and the X4 bought at a local auction last year.
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I’m afraid my memory gets erased the second after I overpay.
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I'm a cheapskate. For many years, I gave myself a $300 road bike cap. Raised it to $350 a handful of years ago. This year, I took off the governor and bought a really great Merckx from a fellow BF member. Let's just say I paid many times my previous cap and leave it at that. I'm glad I did. It's sublime.
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This bike was on Craigslist in Sacramento for some time. Eventually the price dropped to about half of the original listing. Original owner had it built in 1979, rode it about a hundred miles and then hung it up for forty years or so.
I traveled to north Cal with my my family during covid to pick it up. It is my most expensive old bike, and the travel cost added to that. It was a welcome vacation during those months of being in lock down.
1979 Michael Johnson with a full Superbe group(rd is still in the box).
I traveled to north Cal with my my family during covid to pick it up. It is my most expensive old bike, and the travel cost added to that. It was a welcome vacation during those months of being in lock down.
1979 Michael Johnson with a full Superbe group(rd is still in the box).
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For me it's a tie. I paid as much for an '81 Takara Deluxe 12 as I did for an '84 Raleigh Racing USA. The Takara was a nostalgic purchase my heart wanted and the Raleigh I just thought was pretty. Seeing as I got the Raleigh at a good price, it offset what I paid for the Takara. My area doesn't seem to turn up high end bikes like it does bike boom bikes or I would be in the group that has paid mucho dinero.
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I no doubt have more into this one than anything else, although I couldn't begin t calculate exactly how much that is. Certainly into the not-insignificant four figures over well over ten years to get to this point, but I am blissfully ignorant of how not-insignificant the number to the left of the comma is.
The most I have ever paid at one time was for a 1986 De Rosa. I sold a fair number of the parts that came on it and did it up in Campy 10sp triple. Then I traded the frame & fork for the above-pictured frame only (I had a fork I could use, since replaced by the fork you see in the photo) and move the components over from the De Rosa. The De Rosa was great and I liked it a lot. I like this even better.
The most I have ever paid at one time was for a 1986 De Rosa. I sold a fair number of the parts that came on it and did it up in Campy 10sp triple. Then I traded the frame & fork for the above-pictured frame only (I had a fork I could use, since replaced by the fork you see in the photo) and move the components over from the De Rosa. The De Rosa was great and I liked it a lot. I like this even better.
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I no doubt have more into this one than anything else, although I couldn't begin t calculate exactly how much that is. Certainly into the not-insignificant four figures over well over ten years to get to this point, but I am blissfully ignorant of how not-insignificant the number to the left of the comma is.
The most I have ever paid at one time was for a 1986 De Rosa. I sold a fair number of the parts that came on it and did it up in Campy 10sp triple. Then I traded the frame & fork for the above-pictured frame only (I had a fork I could use, since replaced by the fork you see in the photo) and move the components over from the De Rosa. The De Rosa was great and I liked it a lot. I like this even better.
The most I have ever paid at one time was for a 1986 De Rosa. I sold a fair number of the parts that came on it and did it up in Campy 10sp triple. Then I traded the frame & fork for the above-pictured frame only (I had a fork I could use, since replaced by the fork you see in the photo) and move the components over from the De Rosa. The De Rosa was great and I liked it a lot. I like this even better.
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I have never "overpaid" for a bike, always know exactly what I was getting and get exactly what I pay for, no delusions of grandeur, no unrealistic expectations.
There is always a leap of faith factor and a tempering of expectations, skewing these correctly lessens greatly any buyers remorse.
They're have been a couple that were grossly over and or misrepresented IMO that I forged ahead on but none have been life threatening in the end.
The most expensive bike's I have were around $1500, every one of them was worth every penny.
The custom Strawberry was magnitudes over any other and is another category entirely, again IMO.
It is by far the most expensive and best value to me.
There is always a leap of faith factor and a tempering of expectations, skewing these correctly lessens greatly any buyers remorse.
They're have been a couple that were grossly over and or misrepresented IMO that I forged ahead on but none have been life threatening in the end.
The most expensive bike's I have were around $1500, every one of them was worth every penny.
The custom Strawberry was magnitudes over any other and is another category entirely, again IMO.
It is by far the most expensive and best value to me.
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Most of my projects start off as frames, and then I build slowly with a combination of parts from my bins and odds & ends gathered piecemeal. The most I paid at time of purchase was $550 for my Merlin F/F plus headset and BB. Over the next few months, I'd guess I paid another $400 for the Dura-Ace parts and consumables I didn't already have on hand. This is the bike I really wanted but couldn't afford BITD. No regrets.
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The most I've spent on a vintage bike was for this 1974 Masi Gran Criterium.
I had an idea that I was overpaying at the time. The seller was terminally ill and trying to settle his affairs in advance, and I had the money so I chose not to haggle on the price. I paid about the current MSRP of a Surly Disc Trucker. I have no regrets about it whatsoever.
I had an idea that I was overpaying at the time. The seller was terminally ill and trying to settle his affairs in advance, and I had the money so I chose not to haggle on the price. I paid about the current MSRP of a Surly Disc Trucker. I have no regrets about it whatsoever.
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I’m with Gaucho. I have not bought a complete bike for me since 1987, which was $495 for my Crest Cannondale. I have paid no more than $350 including shipping for any of the frames I have procured, even from overseas.
Basically my wallet takes torture by 1,000 slices...
Basically my wallet takes torture by 1,000 slices...
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1987 Crest Cannondale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin Performance EL, 1990ish Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Competition, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 Cannondale M500, 1984 Mercian, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi (model unknown), 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super, 1971 Raleigh International, 1998 Corratec Ap & Dun, 1991 Peugeot Slimestone
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I don't remember exactly how much I paid for this - bought it from a Forum member, maybe $575?
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Most I've shelled out for a vintage bike is my 1991 Klein Quantum and that was a little over 2 years ago. Definitely well worth the $400 asking price. Got it from the original owner who bought it new in San Francisco. He'd put a ton of miles on it but took extremely good care of the bike so it didn't need any major repairs. Changed a few things to suit my riding style but that's it. Stem has a reproduction Salsa sticker on it at this point. Original wheelset it back on it now too, the ones in this photo were terrible (old, high mileage and abused meant I kept breaking spokes).
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I had an eye out for one of these-in my size and in good shape- off and on for over thirty years. When I came across this one, I paid what was asked. I never thought about whether I had overpaid; it is now in the hands of the person who values it the most. I think that standard applies to a number of my machines.
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No its not, not specifically.
That is a universal, step through frame, one for all, all for one.
Many companies only made this style and "mixte" literally means universal, butcher, baker, candlestick maker, postman, highwayman, etc, etc, on and on.
That is a universal, step through frame, one for all, all for one.
Many companies only made this style and "mixte" literally means universal, butcher, baker, candlestick maker, postman, highwayman, etc, etc, on and on.
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That's the thing with vintage bikes, isn't it? It's frequently said on this site that a bike is worth whatever somebody is willing to pay for it. The day I bought my Masi, it was worth exactly what I paid, possibly a bit more. There are days when I think I got a bargain. There are also days when I'm certain I couldn't get half my money back, Both are probably true at different times. It just depends on who is looking for that bike.
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