Help ID this fork
#1
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Joined: Mar 2024
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Help ID this fork on a kessels bike
Posted recently about a 1970s Kessels. Feedback from folks who know about these bikes suggests the fork may not be original. The inside of the fork crown (triangle cut) doesn't match the expected 2 holes for a 3rd generation Kessels: https://www.dcisite.be/en/dci-news/K...ow-to-identify.
Attributes consistent with Kessels: Reynolds (based on sticker), likely original chrome and Campagnolo dropouts. The bike was based in Belgium until recently and prior owner bought it this way.
Any thoughts? One-off fork from Kessels, maybe another Belgian brand (Flandria), something else altogether?


Attributes consistent with Kessels: Reynolds (based on sticker), likely original chrome and Campagnolo dropouts. The bike was based in Belgium until recently and prior owner bought it this way.
Any thoughts? One-off fork from Kessels, maybe another Belgian brand (Flandria), something else altogether?


Last edited by DaveB1960; 03-06-25 at 09:37 AM.
#3
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#5
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our framebuilder members should be able to definitively identify the crown straightaway -
bulgie Doug Fattic
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our framebuilder members should be able to definitively identify the crown straightaway -
bulgie Doug Fattic
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#6
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Joined: Mar 2024
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our framebuilder members should be able to definitively identify the crown straightaway -
bulgie Doug Fattic
-----
our framebuilder members should be able to definitively identify the crown straightaway -
bulgie Doug Fattic
-----
#7
The Nervex crown juvela shows is hollow, made of sheet metal wrapped around and welded. Sounds cheap but it's an exceptionally light and strong crown, I have never seen one fail.
The mystery crown is forged solid, no hollow section. Also strong, but not as light. I have made a few forks with that crown, circa 1980, but I don't remember for sure what they were called. The name Vitus is floating up in the Magic 8-ball of my mind, but don't put much weight behind that, I have low confidence that it's right. Vitus (Ateliers de la Rive) of course mostly made frame tubes (prior to the glued aluminum frames), and if they distributed a crown it would have been made by another contractor anyway.
I do know the tangs down the inside of the blades were separate pieces, with just a butt joint with the rest of the crown. Generally just brazed at the same time as the crown-to-blades, any gap filled in with braze and filed smooth after.
The mystery crown is forged solid, no hollow section. Also strong, but not as light. I have made a few forks with that crown, circa 1980, but I don't remember for sure what they were called. The name Vitus is floating up in the Magic 8-ball of my mind, but don't put much weight behind that, I have low confidence that it's right. Vitus (Ateliers de la Rive) of course mostly made frame tubes (prior to the glued aluminum frames), and if they distributed a crown it would have been made by another contractor anyway.
I do know the tangs down the inside of the blades were separate pieces, with just a butt joint with the rest of the crown. Generally just brazed at the same time as the crown-to-blades, any gap filled in with braze and filed smooth after.
#8
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Joined: Mar 2024
Posts: 109
Likes: 39
The Nervex crown juvela shows is hollow, made of sheet metal wrapped around and welded. Sounds cheap but it's an exceptionally light and strong crown, I have never seen one fail.
The mystery crown is forged solid, no hollow section. Also strong, but not as light. I have made a few forks with that crown, circa 1980, but I don't remember for sure what they were called. The name Vitus is floating up in the Magic 8-ball of my mind, but don't put much weight behind that, I have low confidence that it's right. Vitus (Ateliers de la Rive) of course mostly made frame tubes (prior to the glued aluminum frames), and if they distributed a crown it would have been made by another contractor anyway.
I do know the tangs down the inside of the blades were separate pieces, with just a butt joint with the rest of the crown. Generally just brazed at the same time as the crown-to-blades, any gap filled in with braze and filed smooth after.
The mystery crown is forged solid, no hollow section. Also strong, but not as light. I have made a few forks with that crown, circa 1980, but I don't remember for sure what they were called. The name Vitus is floating up in the Magic 8-ball of my mind, but don't put much weight behind that, I have low confidence that it's right. Vitus (Ateliers de la Rive) of course mostly made frame tubes (prior to the glued aluminum frames), and if they distributed a crown it would have been made by another contractor anyway.
I do know the tangs down the inside of the blades were separate pieces, with just a butt joint with the rest of the crown. Generally just brazed at the same time as the crown-to-blades, any gap filled in with braze and filed smooth after.
#9
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From: PDX
Bikes: Merz x 5 + Specialized Merz Allez x 2, Strawberry/Newlands/DiNucci/Ti x3, Gordon, Fuso/Moulton x2, Bornstein, Paisley,1958-74 Paramounts x3, 3rensho, 74 Moto TC, 73-78 Raleigh Pro's x5, Marinoni x2, 1960 Cinelli SC, 1980 Bianchi SC, PX-10 X 2
#11
certainly a fork made with 531 blades, a quality crown with reinforcing tangs and Campy ends iplus fully chrome-plated indicates a high grade fork. Maybe not the quality you'd get frrom a custom builder but for a production fork in Benelux? pretty darn good
#12
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Thanks. You answered my underlying question, which was how much of a "downgrade" is the fork. Obviously, having the original is better but I don't feel it's a big deal.









