Guest Article: Testing Rule #12

If Rule #12 does not smolder deep in your soul, you might not be a Velominatus. I’ll still be riffling through bike magazine porn, from the inevitable wheelchair, in the old folks home. Some of us have hidden new bikes from our better halves. Every known bit of subterfuge has been employed to downplay the addition of another bike to the stable. It’s what we do. @1860 has his own story, with no subterfuge involved.

VLVV, Gianni

Last weekend I don’t know what was going on, call it fate, call it alignment of some fucking planets, call it whatever the hell you want, it was surreal. As a committed Velominatus, I know all the Rules very well especially Rule #12, but after buying a nice road bike recently and with a tight budget situation, I was planning to let a deliberately casual amount of time pass until Rule #25 and especially s-1 was closely tested. On Friday, my wife, who is addicted to a website where people sell used furniture and stuff, which was always ugly new or used, ended up buying a sofa and I was more or less drafted into helping her carry it. It turned out to be ugly, uncomfortable, but most of all extremely fucking heavy. Carrying it was torture. Finally I sat down on the abomination and ended up slamming some piece of wood and I thought my curse was complete. Apparently during this whole ordeal my level of enthusiasm was registered by the wife, and I was in the doghouse.

Then on Sunday, she showed me, for reasons which I will never understand, a search on aforementioned website, a search for a Colnago Master which turned up a beautiful frame in my size. This woman who had just put me through this ordeal said to me “Hey look, you always wanted a Colnago, doesn’t this one look nice?” In fact, it was absolutely the coolest art-deco painted frame I had ever seen, and I was already imagining the awesomeness of this frame with a new Campagnolo Super Record group and modern wheels. So I, in a deliberately casual way, tried to work out the Rules of Engagement with my wife, all of which I ended up ignoring (“Just reserve it and think about it overnight”, “Maybe he will take one of your other bikes in trade”…).

I went over to see the guy on Sunday and I encountered a veritable bike coolness museum with more than 40 bikes. He had everything, from a Colnago C40 to Pinarello this and that to a gold plated fork to a Gios Steel Frame.

The Colnago Master Olympic was beautiful, it was amazing and in great condition. I had no choice, with some guilt and difficulty, I realised I was hooked and had to get it. So I bought the frame and started hoping that this was the n+1 part of Rule #12, and not exceeding the s-1 variant.

Due to some crazy turn of fate, planets, cows farts or something or other, I am now in possession of bike #4. When I got home, there were further probing questions from aforementioned darling wife, “How much will it cost to build up the bike”, “Can you do this by yourself”? It was extremely hard to avoid the money question, so I tried hard to avoid being pinned down on a figure all the while trying to imagine a Campagnolo 80th Anniversary Super Record groupset on this frame. The “can you do this” question is a classic, I am trusted at work to build, manage and run power plants worth hundreds of millions, but at home every time I take a tool in my hands my abilities are ruthlessly questioned.

So now the plan is to build it up in a modern, classic mix that I will like, many won’t but big deal. And in the end, I am feeling pretty ok with the world and looking forward to finally taking it out for a ride, but also agonizing over the wheelset (Shamal Ultra or Vento?). I am also very thankful for the awful sofa which may probably more than cow farts in China or alignment of planets led me to getting an awesome classic frame. Of course my beautiful wife played a huge role in this, but if I am starting to be honest about this, I might have to admit what my bikes really cost.

The Chamber of Dreams
1860

View Comments

  • Well fucking done.  I wish my wife searched for cool old bikes for me every time she sent me out on a damn fool crusade to buy some crap furniture on Craigslist.

    What a cool bike -- that paint job inspired the paint on my custom rig.

    If funds are an issue, get Chorus instead of SR.

  • @1860 Fucking strong work! And despite the sofa saga you owe your wife big time.

    Is the tin foil in the chamber of dreams to thwart machinations of the agents of the anti-v?

  • seems a fairly straightforward penance...and more likely that you and your known weaknesses were played against you. Not on an unholy level like some nameless twat waffle ex-cyclist convicted of doping who used yellow cock rings as cache. No, more like LeMan finishing atop Alpe d'Huez alongside the Badger in a show of unity...for which the Badger took a few extra pedals to cross first.

    "How can I dupe this fool into moving, accepting, and not asking how much I spent on this couch that no man would appreciate?" "And how can I maintain a level of control so as this is not an equal transaction?"

    "I'll let him get a frame, but only a frame, and make him build it up himself!"

    I've V'd that hellingen many times my friend. Although, conversely, I'm trying to find a way to make n+1 actually n+2. I'll come into some money in October and a new bike was always a given. But then I decided on a blue Lemond Washoe, and the price exceeded my initial estimate for a CAAD10. Unfortunately, at the same time, I decided I needed a SS frame on hand for track work and what not. So the total cost has nearly doubled. And I have to figure out just how much I'm willing to pay (figuratively) to get both with my breadwinner/accountant wife...

  • Nice looking frame. Well done.

    Am, sure I have seen some resto mods done with old frames with current 10 sp Campy with alloy ahifters etc, Centaur I think it is and it looks suitable retro with modern functionality.

    And I think we need a pic of that couch please.

  • @anotherdownunder

    Nice looking frame. Well done.

    Am, sure I have seen some resto mods done with old frames with current 10 sp Campy with alloy ahifters etc, Centaur I think it is and it looks suitable retro with modern functionality.

    And I think we need a pic of that couch please.

    Athena is the best Gruppo shiny 11 Sp groupset per my Pina in Bikes a while back.  Personally I like to stay with shiny and conventional spokes vs carbon and black wheels but it's all down to preference.  The result is a great ride with the character of the original but the slickness of a modern groupset - and brakes that actually stop you.

  • After reading this, I think I'll go get the Colnago I have hidden in the storage unit out, and rude it this weekend. I'll have to put it back Sunday, yiu know, because the wife's coming back in town.

  • Word.

    I just spotted an Athena EPS gruppo at the local distributor's for a crazy price, which means only one thing; I need to build a bike around it. Calling Jaegher, calling Jaegher, come in Diel...

  • Congrats! I love old colnago's.

    I'm in the same boat and will be building this up very soon.

  • @Teocalli

    What is your opinion (and this is open to the wisdom of the collective) on Daytona 10 speed (shiny) for vintage or retro builds?

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