Cannondale horizontal rear dropouts?
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Cannondale horizontal rear dropouts?
I purchased and am awaiting delivery of a '96 Cannondale R600 frameset. It has, what I would call, horizontal rear dropouts. Can anyone tell me the design philosophy behind this? I believe that '96 was the last year that Cannondale did this and it was only on the road models.
I suspect that this was done to stiffen the rear triangle. Did it work? Why did they stop?
Don't get me wrong, I'm thrilled to find a Cannondale frame in such good condition and am looking forward to riding it. I have a Cannondale road frame from the first year of production and, even though it is larger than I usually ride, I am impressed at it's quick and speedy performance. I'm looking forward to riding one that is my proper size.
I suspect that this was done to stiffen the rear triangle. Did it work? Why did they stop?
Don't get me wrong, I'm thrilled to find a Cannondale frame in such good condition and am looking forward to riding it. I have a Cannondale road frame from the first year of production and, even though it is larger than I usually ride, I am impressed at it's quick and speedy performance. I'm looking forward to riding one that is my proper size.
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If it's the same 3.0 "crit" frame they were making in 1989 you're gonna have a great time on that bike.
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It isn't a particularly important feature. It doesn't really have any downsides, and the 3.0 and 2.8 frames were better riding than previous frames and had well designed geometry. I had a 3.0 for 25 years.
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Why do you think they were better riding than the earlier ‘Dale frames? Just curious.
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@bikemig, I ride an '88 ST400 as my winter bike (fitted with fenders, rack, bag, and lights) and ride a '93 R600 2.8 the remainder of the year. Granted they are set up differently and the amount of clothing worn in the winter compared to the summer is very different. But I'd say that the biggest difference is in the weight, geometry and the wheel base.
The ST400 is solid, steady, great for long rides, and the bike I'd select for touring. The R600 is quick and nimble. If I want to ride a fast, vigorous, heart rate elevating, 25 miles, for solid exercise, this is the bike I select.
My 2 cents from a 60 year old perspective.
The ST400 is solid, steady, great for long rides, and the bike I'd select for touring. The R600 is quick and nimble. If I want to ride a fast, vigorous, heart rate elevating, 25 miles, for solid exercise, this is the bike I select.
My 2 cents from a 60 year old perspective.
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@bikemig, I ride an '88 ST400 as my winter bike (fitted with fenders, rack, bag, and lights) and ride a '93 R600 2.8 the remainder of the year. Granted they are set up differently and the amount of clothing worn in the winter compared to the summer is very different. But I'd say that the biggest difference is in the weight, geometry and the wheel base.
The ST400 is solid, steady, great for long rides, and the bike I'd select for touring. The R600 is quick and nimble. If I want to ride a fast, vigorous, heart rate elevating, 25 miles, for solid exercise, this is the bike I select.
My 2 cents from a 60 year old perspective.
The ST400 is solid, steady, great for long rides, and the bike I'd select for touring. The R600 is quick and nimble. If I want to ride a fast, vigorous, heart rate elevating, 25 miles, for solid exercise, this is the bike I select.
My 2 cents from a 60 year old perspective.
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While the cantilever dropout contributed to a marginally lighter and stiffer rear triangle, the practical aspect was that it made it easier to grab the hub's quick release lever for a wheel change during a race. Earlier 'Dales had a quite busy dropout junction with the thicker stays and you had to ensure the lever was positioned below the stays so it would fully lock. This took a little more time and thought, which was critical in a competitive situation, Also, the style simplified and may have prompted the design and incorporation of a replaceable hanger.
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Comparing the race bikes between '88 and '89 when the 3.0 came out, the 3.0 had much thinner and less abusively stiff seatstays. The geometry didn't change, but they managed to make the rear end a little softer. Plus, they went to an aluminum fork in '89. The 3.0 frame was an effort to get drivetrain stiffness more from the oversized downtube and heavy chainstays instead of the whole frame.
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The Cannondale frame arrived today. It's a 2.8 with black/purple '96 R600 color scheme but no R600 on the top tube. It has a carbon fiber fork with a 1" steering tube and a Chris King headset. I'm pretty sure the headset is non stock. Could it be that this was purchased as a frameset and not a complete bicycle?
The down-tube is massive. I measured 55mm diameter at the bottom-bracket.
It will be built with bits from my Campy bit locker and a Chorus carbon fiber seat-post from E-bay. (Seems kind of silly, carbon fiber seat-post and Brooks B17. But hey, weight weenie with comfort.)
I'll include pictures when the English bottom bracket shows up and I finish the assembly.
Thanks folks for your comments.
The down-tube is massive. I measured 55mm diameter at the bottom-bracket.
It will be built with bits from my Campy bit locker and a Chorus carbon fiber seat-post from E-bay. (Seems kind of silly, carbon fiber seat-post and Brooks B17. But hey, weight weenie with comfort.)
I'll include pictures when the English bottom bracket shows up and I finish the assembly.
Thanks folks for your comments.
Last edited by Stev8del8; 03-12-18 at 10:23 AM.
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I have always been a chrome fork and polished aluminum Campy type of guy. I must admit that a carbon fork and seat-post has my interest. I wonder how it would look with all black and carbon Chorus bits. I do happen to have a new set of black Record hubs.
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There certainly isn't much clearance between the Record dual pivot rear brake caliper and a 25mm GP 4Season tire. This frame was definitely not designed for a rear rack and fenders.
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No bike with short reach brakes was designed for fenders. But at least it will take 25s - many newer bikes will not.
Last edited by Kontact; 03-10-18 at 12:55 PM.
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The Cannondale frame arrived today. It's a 2.8 with black/purple '96 R600 color scheme but no R600 on the top tube. It has a carbon fiber fork with a 1" steering tube and a Chris King headset. I'm pretty sure the headset is non stock. Could it be that this was purchased as a frameset and not a complete bicycle?
The down-tube is massive. I measured 55cm at the bottom-bracket.
The down-tube is massive. I measured 55cm at the bottom-bracket.
My CAAD-3 MTB would have been an F-1000 if it had been a complete bike, but because I bought it as a frame/fork, it has no model badging, just the Cannondale branding and CAAD-3 logo.
Those big, thin-wall tubes were/are what make 'Dales ride the way they do, plus they're incredibly well-finished for 'mass-market' bikes. The tubes are huge by '90s standards, (the DT on my F-xxx mics out at 58mm) they're still pretty beefy alongside the modern hydroformed stuff.
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I just got my bike a couple days ago, and this is my exact frame. This frame looks so great, and someone along the line added yellow tires and bottle cages to go with the accents. I'll probably finish the job with yellow bar tape when I upgrade the downtube shifters to STI.
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That is a gorgeous frame, yes? Mine has a couple of "character dings" but is otherwise perfect.
I haven't yet been able to get out on the road, but will very soon.
I haven't yet been able to get out on the road, but will very soon.
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I've been riding older Cannondales since 1986. My understanding is that the change to the rear triangle was the result of the Klein lawsuit. Cannondale won every part of the suit except the oval seat stays because the oval design was attributed to Klein. At least that is what I was told.
I bought my 1988 Criterium from a shop that was blowing out all the unsold old Cannondale frames for $100 with a steel fork. Needless to say it was a steal and I snatched one up. For me the ride with the steel fork wasn't harsh and have put thousands of miles on those bikes.
John
I bought my 1988 Criterium from a shop that was blowing out all the unsold old Cannondale frames for $100 with a steel fork. Needless to say it was a steal and I snatched one up. For me the ride with the steel fork wasn't harsh and have put thousands of miles on those bikes.
John
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Back to the original post, I don't think those are what you would call horizontal dropouts. They're verticals, but are cantilevered out beyond the rear triangle.
Horizontal dropouts suggest adjustable wheelbase, verticals are not adjustable.
Horizontal dropouts suggest adjustable wheelbase, verticals are not adjustable.
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Just curious -were these frames ultra stiff? Stiffer than the 531 and Columbus frames of the day?
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+2 for BB stiffness. They were nice and racy everywhere else--never rode a harsh one. I had a 3.0 frame that could be quite tame.
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The 3.0 frame had much lighter seatstays and an aluminum fork, which made those frames ride softer than the previous models which generally have a harsh riding reputation.
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I have one of the first Cannondale road frames, with steel fork. Curiously, the rear spacing fits a 130mm hub. I didn't think that it road any more harshly than a good SL frame, even with 23mm tires. Maybe it's just me, but I think that the Cannondale frame went faster with less effort.
Thanks, gugie, I just didn't know what else to call it.
Thanks, gugie, I just didn't know what else to call it.
Last edited by Stev8del8; 04-08-18 at 09:25 PM.
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The Cannondale frame arrived today. It's a 2.8 with black/purple '96 R600 color scheme but no R600 on the top tube. It has a carbon fiber fork with a 1" steering tube and a Chris King headset. I'm pretty sure the headset is non stock. Could it be that this was purchased as a frameset and not a complete bicycle?
The down-tube is massive. I measured 55mm diameter at the bottom-bracket.
It will be built with bits from my Campy bit locker and a Chorus carbon fiber seat-post from E-bay. (Seems kind of silly, carbon fiber seat-post and Brooks B17. But hey, weight weenie with comfort.)
I'll include pictures when the English bottom bracket shows up and I finish the assembly.
Thanks folks for your comments.
The down-tube is massive. I measured 55mm diameter at the bottom-bracket.
It will be built with bits from my Campy bit locker and a Chorus carbon fiber seat-post from E-bay. (Seems kind of silly, carbon fiber seat-post and Brooks B17. But hey, weight weenie with comfort.)
I'll include pictures when the English bottom bracket shows up and I finish the assembly.
Thanks folks for your comments.
I just purchased an '86 SR500 frame (the 15th cannondale in production, for that year...going by serial number) and I purchased both a Chris King headset and Chris King BB. Slapping on a full Shimano Sora grouppo, fi'zi:k carbon drops, and seatpost. Also about to completely sandblast (w/glass bead) and powdercoat it, adding exact replicas of all decals. I love the old cannondales because the welds always look so smooth and beautiful, compared to the rough-looking ones you see on alloy bikes today.
#25
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>> Horizontal dropouts suggest adjustable wheelbase, verticals are not adjustable.
What @gugie said.
But I want my money back; I specifically came to this thread because I've never seen a Cannondale with "horizontal" dropouts, and if I did, I'd buy it. I've been riding an H400 hybrid in the winter with an internal-gear hub, and I'm sold on the concept for winter, but it's a pain when you can't adjust the chain... doable but not great.
I would love to find a Cannondale -- rigid mountain bike, while I'm dreaming -- where I can adjust the chain, but I don't think such an animal exists.
Mountain bikes went went vertical in the late 80s and didn't come back.
Regarding the allegedly harsh ride of these bikes, I think it's an illusion. It's rigid alright, but it's not like a DeRosa with SL tubing will have any vertical give in the frame either.. the vibrational properties are diffferent, giving it a different sound and feel; my touring 'dale feels "rattly" at times, if that's the word I want, but the ride is fine, esp. with the 38 mm tires I put on it.
cheers -mathias
What @gugie said.
But I want my money back; I specifically came to this thread because I've never seen a Cannondale with "horizontal" dropouts, and if I did, I'd buy it. I've been riding an H400 hybrid in the winter with an internal-gear hub, and I'm sold on the concept for winter, but it's a pain when you can't adjust the chain... doable but not great.
I would love to find a Cannondale -- rigid mountain bike, while I'm dreaming -- where I can adjust the chain, but I don't think such an animal exists.
Mountain bikes went went vertical in the late 80s and didn't come back.
Regarding the allegedly harsh ride of these bikes, I think it's an illusion. It's rigid alright, but it's not like a DeRosa with SL tubing will have any vertical give in the frame either.. the vibrational properties are diffferent, giving it a different sound and feel; my touring 'dale feels "rattly" at times, if that's the word I want, but the ride is fine, esp. with the 38 mm tires I put on it.
cheers -mathias
Last edited by steine13; 01-02-22 at 09:51 AM.