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Raleigh and Colnago identification

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Old 10-04-09 | 08:37 PM
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Raleigh and Colnago identification

I picked up a colnago the other day that has been repainted, and I've had a Raleigh frame hanging in my garage since a friend had me strip it and build him bike that fit him better.

The Raleigh is definitely carlton, campy drops, lug cutouts, with slots in the bb. I'll update this post with a serial number in a little bit.

The colnago has campy drops, chromed fork crown, not sure if there's more chrome under the repaint, and I can't find the serial #. I haven't tried too hard, just looked it over pretty good. It has a campy record headset, which I think is C Record, but I'm not well versed in the campy line. There's a clover carved out of the bb, and clover pantographing on the fork crown. Also wondering what the front derailleur is, nuovo record?

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Old 10-04-09 | 08:43 PM
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The lug work looks like a raleigh professional to me...it's nearly identical to my team pro.
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Old 10-04-09 | 09:13 PM
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The first is a 1978 Raleigh Professional Mark V - undoubtedly.

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Old 10-04-09 | 09:18 PM
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Originally Posted by cudak888
The first is a 1978 Raleigh Professional Mark V - undoubtedly.

-Kurt

Very nice, thank you. How did you know that? And what is the significance of Mark V?
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Old 10-04-09 | 10:54 PM
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Originally Posted by krems81
Very nice, thank you. How did you know that? And what is the significance of Mark V?
Different variations of the Raleigh Pro got different Mark #'s. IV has a sloping chromed fork crown. V has a flat, painted fork crown and windowed lugs.
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Old 10-04-09 | 11:12 PM
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Originally Posted by stausty
Different variations of the Raleigh Pro got different Mark #'s. IV has a sloping chromed fork crown. V has a flat, painted fork crown and windowed lugs.
Correct. The Mark V also went with plain seatstay caps as opposed to the fastback seat lug, previously used on all Professionals from the 1970 Mark II's until the final '76 Mark IV's. The Mark V's - along with the early pre-'70, first-gen Professionals - were the only examples (short of SDBU Pro's) to use anything other then the fastback cluster.

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Old 10-04-09 | 11:44 PM
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I take it the Raleigh Pro was the top model for any given year?

Also, what exactly is the difference between the fastback stays and regular caps? Are plain caps mitered and brazed alongside the lug, while fastback stays are incorporated into the lug somehow?

Finally, what is the SDBU Pro?

As for the Colnago, any clues?
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Old 10-05-09 | 12:21 AM
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Originally Posted by krems81
I take it the Raleigh Pro was the top model for any given year?
The Team Professional trumps it. SDBU Team Pros are the absolute top.

Originally Posted by krems81
Also, what exactly is the difference between the fastback stays and regular caps? Are plain caps mitered and brazed alongside the lug, while fastback stays are incorporated into the lug somehow?
Fastback seat lug/cluster:



Yours has a more conventional routing of the seat stays. Caps can be either forged pieces that fit at the end of the seat stay tube and provide the connecting interface between lug and tube, or it can be a flat piece of steel brazed to the top of a tube cut at an angle (as with your Professional Mark V).

Note that Raleigh was probably the undisputed champion of utterly sloppy seat stay caps - note how the caps "spill over" the tube over most of the tube's diameter (see picture #2). A framebuilder that would take any pride in his or her work would file them down.

Originally Posted by krems81
Finally, what is the SDBU Pro?
My mistake - SBDU. Stands for Raleigh Specialist Bicycle Development Unit, located in Ilkeston. The custom frames were produced here, along with the true Team Pros - they generally show significantly better quality then the production from other factories (though the Ilkeston seat stay caps are sometimes just as sloppy as normal production Pros, go figure).

Originally Posted by krems81
As for the Colnago, any clues?
None at this end, sorry. I never followed Colnagos - don't care for them, and information is too spotty.

-Kurt

P.S.: Do you have an overall photo of that Raleigh Pro frame? They didn't come with braze-ons when new, and I notice these look abnormally low. I'll wager a respray for someone with very odd taste in where his shifters belong.
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Old 10-05-09 | 05:11 AM
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This is a Team Pro, but it wasn't made in SBDU...it was Workshop/Carlton:

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Old 10-05-09 | 08:00 AM
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Originally Posted by cudak888
The first is a 1978 Raleigh Professional Mark V - undoubtedly.

-Kurt
Exactly
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Old 10-05-09 | 08:01 AM
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Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
This is a Team Pro replica, but it wasn't made in SBDU...it was Workshop/Carlton:
...
fify.

It's one of the more desirable replicas - without question.
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Old 10-05-09 | 09:03 AM
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Originally Posted by cudak888
P.S.: Do you have an overall photo of that Raleigh Pro frame? They didn't come with braze-ons when new, and I notice these look abnormally low. I'll wager a respray for someone with very odd taste in where his shifters belong.
+1 The color also seems a bit off - too gray; not blue enough. If you look closely at the pics, you can see a few spots that appear to be the original paint; my guess is the respray was done without taking the frame down to bare metal.
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Old 10-05-09 | 09:08 AM
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USAZorro - little confused...a local guy and self proclaimed raleigh expert who works at Via told me it is a team pro and that some were made in Carlton (although not as desirable as the SBDUs).
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Old 10-05-09 | 09:43 AM
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Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
USAZorro - little confused...a local guy and self proclaimed raleigh expert who works at Via told me it is a team pro and that some were made in Carlton (although not as desirable as the SBDUs).
If he looked at that silver and blue paint job, turned to you, and stated it's a Team Pro with a straight face, he has demoted himself to self-proclaimed idiot.

Then again, a good majority of those self-proclaimed LBS Raleigh experts are idiots who base their knowledge on fuzzy memories of when they used to sell these things back in the '70s. Problem is, they never admit their knowledge isn't concrete.


Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
This is a Team Pro, but it wasn't made in SBDU...it was Workshop/Carlton:
Come to think of it, IIRC, the Team Pros did not use the fastback clusters, even during the Mk IV era.

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Old 10-05-09 | 09:45 AM
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Originally Posted by cudak888
Do you have an overall photo of that Raleigh Pro frame? They didn't come with braze-ons when new, and I notice these look abnormally low. I'll wager a respray for someone with very odd taste in where his shifters belong.
Originally Posted by jbonamici
+1 The color also seems a bit off - too gray; not blue enough. If you look closely at the pics, you can see a few spots that appear to be the original paint; my guess is the respray was done without taking the frame down to bare metal.
Seriously good eye. Yes, there's something funny with the paint. I think someone tried to repaint in a similar color without striping the original paint first. If the original didn't have dt bosses, these must have been added. It would make sense, because the bike was equipped with choice aftermarket components, so the owner wanted it set up his way. Phil Wood freewheel hubs laced to Ambrosio 19s, Sugino Super Mighty crankset, superbe derailleur, etc.

I guess that kills the value of the Raleigh Pro?

Last edited by krems81; 10-05-09 at 09:49 AM.
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Old 10-05-09 | 09:50 AM
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Originally Posted by cudak888
If he looked at that silver and blue paint job, turned to you, and stated it's a Team Pro with a straight face, he has demoted himself to self-proclaimed idiot.

-Kurt
Kurt,
I think that he's referring to the red one posted above, not the blue/silver

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Old 10-05-09 | 09:51 AM
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Cudak - no - I meant my bike...not his. I suspect he's also not a blow hard...Curtis is pretty famous on the east coast for the vintage stuff. I was told mine was a team pro and not a painted professional...just made in Carlton and not SBDU. A guy in the yahoo raleigh group told me the same...that some pros were made in Carlton because they had more orders than SBDU was able to turn out.
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Old 10-05-09 | 09:53 AM
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Originally Posted by krems81

I guess that kills the value of the Raleigh Pro?
Well, probably; that's one way to look at it. otoh, if you're going to keep it, it's still a very nice frame. If you set it up with bar ends, the boss position wouldn't be quite so unfortunate.
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Old 10-05-09 | 09:56 AM
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Originally Posted by KonAaron Snake
Cudak - no - I meant my bike...not his.
Whoops, my mistake. He knows what he's talking about.

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Old 10-05-09 | 09:59 AM
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Originally Posted by krems81
I guess that kills the value of the Raleigh Pro?
Not necessarily - depends on how far down those shifter bosses are. If they're far down enough to be entirely ungainly and unsightly (sure looks that way), they'd probably be best removed - and if you do that, there goes the paint.

Colnago is the better deal of the two, and not because it's a "Colnago" either - it's simply in better overall shape, and the repaint is presentable.

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Old 10-05-09 | 10:02 AM
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Originally Posted by jbonamici
Well, probably; that's one way to look at it. otoh, if you're going to keep it, it's still a very nice frame. If you set it up with bar ends, the boss position wouldn't be quite so unfortunate.
Well I wasn't planning on keeping it. Its a little small for me, and I have other tastes, usually. I had thought of having it restored to original paint and selling it, but now I wonder if its worth doing that. Come to think of it, if I did that I could probably have the shifters taken off! Not a fan of removing braze ons, but in this case..
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Old 10-05-09 | 10:04 AM
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seeing as Raleigh did custom orders is it possible someone ordered that Pro with the
bosses so low on the downtube? Long armed individual?

If I ever get a Raleigh it's going to be in that mink blue Sliver paint scheme, it's just classic to
my eye.

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Old 10-05-09 | 10:07 AM
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Originally Posted by cudak888
Not necessarily - depends on how far down those shifter bosses are. If they're far down enough to be entirely ungainly and unsightly (sure looks that way), they'd probably be best removed - and if you do that, there goes the paint.

Colnago is the better deal of the two, and not because it's a "Colnago" either - it's simply in better overall shape, and the repaint is presentable.

-Kurt
I'm thinking of getting them both repainted. There's a local bicycle painter here, Chester Cycles, that does a very nice job, and I'd like to try working with him. I'd like to get them restored before selling them, and if the opportunity arises, do a full custom build on one or both for someone local in chicago, or elsewhere.
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Old 10-05-09 | 10:09 AM
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There's a shop that has a pro with that paint job...and the person left the bike there a year ago and hasn't returned for it. He also put bull horns on it and a kick stand.
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Old 10-05-09 | 10:12 AM
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I believe the Colnago is a 75 or 76 model based on cutout on lugs and fork tang
and the combination of the club and "Colnago" on the fork crown.

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