There was a time when bicycles were lovingly handmade by artisans who themselves loved the sport more than those for whom they built the machines. Lugs were filed to become Luggs; chain and seat stays were beautifully chromed for durability despite the grams it added to the frame’s final weight; spokes were chosen for their purpose and laced to hubs and rims in a pattern that suited the specific purpose the wheel was intended to serve. Throughout the process – from building the frame to manufacturing of the components – extra care was taken to make every element of the bicycle beautiful; these bicycles, when you are in their presence, radiate La Vie Velominatus.
As was customary at the time, components would be pantographed and frames repainted and rebranded, leaving behind little evidence of their origin. But hidden in the components and frames were symbols that the manufacturers stamped into their wares to preserve their identity; Colnago their Fiore, Cinelli their C, and Campa their Shield. These symbols have come to hold great meaning within the sport and we of a certain ilk scour the photos of our heroes’ bikes for evidence of their existence.
For a variety of reasons including cost, proprietary tube-shapes, and repeatability of production, these practices have largely died away in mainstream bicycle manufacturing; in fact, nearly every element in the art of bicycle building that requires attention and skill is slowing being eliminated from the craft. Ahead-set stems have replaced the need for a carefully adjusted headset and stem, sealed-bearing bottom brackets and hubs have eliminated the subtle touch required to hold a race in place with one hand while tightening the assembly with the other. By and large, the machines and riders are stronger than the terrain they race over, leaving little practical need for the attention to detail and customization that once came as a matter of course.
There is, however, one magical week of racing where the terrain is still stronger than the riders: the cobbled classics of de Ronde van Vlaanderen and Paris-Roubaix. This is the one week during which the Pros still require highly customized machines and we, as fans, can scour the photos of our heroes’ kit, looking for the symbols tucked away in the components to discern their origins. One such symbol is the brass badge affixed to the valve-hole on Ambrosio rims.
These rims are chosen by the Specialists for their strength on the stones regardless of what wheel sponsorship obligations might exist within the team. Their mystique is further deepened for those of us living in the States because they aren’t available here. It follows, then, that the Golden Ticket, as I call it, is something I’ve coveted for as long as I can remember (which, admittedly, isn’t very long and, upsettingly, keeps getting less long) but have never had a good enough reason to justify procuring from Europe. But Keepers Tour, Cobbled Classics 2012 provided the perfect justification to go about finding a set and I wasted no time in doing so. Upon arrival, the rims spent the better part of two weeks sitting in my living room or next to my bed, patiently waiting for me to pick them up and rub my thumb over the badge, just to reassure myself they were still there.
Not long after the rims arrived, I excitedly loaded a picture of Boonen in the 2010 Ronde and turned the laptop to show my VMH.
Frank: Hey, what do you see.
VMH: Boonen. Goddamn, he’s a stud. Don’t let me too close to him; I can’t be responsible for my actions.
Frank: What about his wheels.
VMH: What?
Frank: Don’t you see? He’s got my rims.
VMH: You can’t possibly know that.
Frank: Openly shows his exasperation by groaning audibly and rolling his eyes. Yes, I do. Check it. You can see the Golden Ticket on his back wheel. Its obvious as shit. What’s wrong with you?
VMH: Sighs, pours another glass of wine. Exits stage left. Hopefully not for good.
*Coincidentally, on the same day that this article was being written, Inrng published a similar (better) article on a related subject of hand-built wheels. Well worth the read: The Dying Art of Wheelbuilding
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View Comments
@frank
Yep, that and sharp fingernails - tell me about it - nearly got caught out a few times as a student days, well before I started cycling
@Gianni
Gianni:
I know that you probably already posted this somewhere in the thread but I cannot find it: What wheelset are you running for the Keepers Tour with the Vit Rubino Pro's?
@Gianni
cool
how did you measure the 28s as 26s? Is the a caliper job?
@Buck Rogers
The factory version I have seem plenty durable; I have two seasons on them now. The spokecount on my set is too low for real cobbles duty, but I'm not afraid to hit ordinary rough stuff or the odd short patch of dirt or gravel with them. Part of the beauty of the wide rim is you can run lower pressures and not risk a pinchflat. Summer I run Vittoria Open Corsas at 95/105 or 90/100. Winter I run Open Paves at pressures as low as 80/90 if it's damp. FWIW I weigh 72 kg.
Based on my experience with them I would certainly consider handbuilts on the 32h rims for cobbles duty (not that I've actually ever ridden something so brutal on a road bike). Here is a pro who says he'd be a lot more worried about how hard it is to source Ambrosio if it weren't for the HED C2 rims (scroll down to the bottom of the post).
@Nate
Cool link. I think I'll just have to get some C2's for the clinchers and a set of Nemesis for tubulars. Might have to wait a bit for either, though, as with Christmas and all, will have to save a bit!
@Buck Rogers
w+1 (or w+2 in this case). Obviously a Rule 12 corollary, and a sound strategy for sneaking gear purchases under the budget radar as a wheelset is a lot less obivous than a new bike.
@Buck Rogers
I was going to beat my factory Campa Scirocco wheels to death, maybe kill them there and throw them in a muddy field. Radial spoked front and some crazy lacing pattern in the back, 1x drive side, radial non-drive side for the most part.
@Dr C
oh yes, get thee the $30 digital calipers for all things, instant metric/english switch, very useful
@Buck Rogers
Near Cumberland Gap. We ride TN-KY-VA. Every ride here involves climbing. Compact cranks are popular here in the hills.
@Gotta Ride Today
Ahhh, great area. I, unfortunately, was in the much flatter western part of TN/KY without too many hills (but still more than here in TX but no where near the hills and mtns of VT/NH that I grew up in).
By the way, I've never found a place where compact cranks are popular :)
Franks's Abrosios get a shout out in Zinn's new tongue in cheek column.