N+1= Terry Classic
#1
Thread Starter
Let your bike be the tool


Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,112
Likes: 710
From: NC/SC border
Bikes: '66 Raleigh Carlton, '70 Ron Cooper, '95 Bianchi CD'I, "Bottecchia" Zonal Frame with Xenon gruppo, "Bottecchia"Carbon Frame with Record Gruppo, Columbia Twosome, Terry Classic, Bianchi SX, Gravity SS/FG, Titanium "Motobecane" with Ultegra DI2
N+1= Terry Classic
Just got this Terry Classic off Craigslist. It had been reduced over the past few weeks from $300. I just wanted it to have a good home, but there is also the hope that if I find the right bicycle my wife will consent to ride with me. Not able to identify the year on Bikepedia, I'm guessing it's about a '94 frankenbike. Campy Olympus? shifters, Campy derailers, cassette, and hubs. Shimano crankset and brakes. No tubing sticker. $125 dollars including Cannondale panniers, frame pumps, and a tool kit.




__________________
Never try to teach a pig to sing...
Never try to teach a pig to sing...
#2
Senior Member

Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 17,196
Likes: 761
From: Ann Arbor, MI
Bikes: 1980 Masi, 1984 Mondonico, 1984 Trek 610, 1980 Woodrup Giro, 2005 Mondonico Futura Leggera ELOS, 1967 PX10E, 1971 Peugeot UO-8
I would bet the Shimano 600 stuff is probably original, but not the Campy. I bought a 1997 Classic for Mrs. Road Fan (matches the BikePedia listing), and it was Tigged, made of Columbus Brain, had full 8-speed Campy triple kit (excepting a TA Alize crankset), and clearly a sport-tour geo (pretty long chain stays). Our frame was built for Terry by Wilier. I saw US-made lugged ones in the Terry Forums which had a for-sale section, and they were mid and late '80s. Yours could date back that far. I don't recall any details about straight bars versus drop, though there were straight-bar models. Mrs. Road Fan's bike has the original drops, 3T stem, and Ergopower levers. I suspect your straight bars were add-ons.
#3
Thread Starter
Let your bike be the tool


Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,112
Likes: 710
From: NC/SC border
Bikes: '66 Raleigh Carlton, '70 Ron Cooper, '95 Bianchi CD'I, "Bottecchia" Zonal Frame with Xenon gruppo, "Bottecchia"Carbon Frame with Record Gruppo, Columbia Twosome, Terry Classic, Bianchi SX, Gravity SS/FG, Titanium "Motobecane" with Ultegra DI2
The Bikepedia site has them using Campy derailers from 93 to 98 and switching from lugged to tig-welded frames in 97. The Olympus thumb shifters aren't mentioned for any year. The handlebars are described as Terry T-bars.
__________________
Never try to teach a pig to sing...
Never try to teach a pig to sing...
#4
Senior Member


Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 10,051
Likes: 2,508
From: Fairplay Co
Bikes: Current 79 Nishiki Custum Sport, Jeunet 620, notable previous bikes P.K. Ripper loop tail, Kawahara Laser Lite, Paramount Track full chrome, Raliegh Internatioanl, Motobecan Super Mirage. 59 Crown royak 3 speed
Just wow on the deal you got a fairly nice Terry frame with decent campy components and extras for $125. I think you got 4/5x what you paid for. With only a little effort clean up and setup wise this should just be a great bike for a woman 5'2 to about 5'7 so you did just great on this bike. As for the Olympus shifters they where short lived and dicountinued based on legal disputes over naming rights.
Last edited by zukahn1; 01-18-14 at 06:00 PM.
#5
Thread Starter
Let your bike be the tool


Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 1,112
Likes: 710
From: NC/SC border
Bikes: '66 Raleigh Carlton, '70 Ron Cooper, '95 Bianchi CD'I, "Bottecchia" Zonal Frame with Xenon gruppo, "Bottecchia"Carbon Frame with Record Gruppo, Columbia Twosome, Terry Classic, Bianchi SX, Gravity SS/FG, Titanium "Motobecane" with Ultegra DI2
I would bet the Shimano 600 stuff is probably original, but not the Campy. I bought a 1997 Classic for Mrs. Road Fan (matches the BikePedia listing), and it was Tigged, made of Columbus Brain, had full 8-speed Campy triple kit (excepting a TA Alize crankset), and clearly a sport-tour geo (pretty long chain stays). Our frame was built for Terry by Wilier. I saw US-made lugged ones in the Terry Forums which had a for-sale section, and they were mid and late '80s. Yours could date back that far. I don't recall any details about straight bars versus drop, though there were straight-bar models. Mrs. Road Fan's bike has the original drops, 3T stem, and Ergopower levers. I suspect your straight bars were add-ons.
__________________
Never try to teach a pig to sing...
Never try to teach a pig to sing...
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
1960frejus
Classic and Vintage Bicycles: Whats it Worth? Appraisals.
6
12-01-13 07:03 AM
apg
Classic and Vintage Bicycles: Whats it Worth? Appraisals.
8
11-17-13 02:36 PM






