Show Us Your Vintage Cannondale!
#1351
Vintage aged
'97 f1000
Last year I picked up an '86 Cannondale hybrid and couldn't believe the beautiful welds on the aluminum frame. Gorgeous. Now I find myself browsing the classifieds looking for old Cannondales at bargain prices.
When I saw this '97 F1000 local I had to have it. And get this, mine is the ONLY bike in Cannondale history to suffer a seized Head Shok. Yup, mine is the only one. Good thing it's already set up nicely for paved rail trails with smooth tires and cargo capacity, which is where I will ride it. S-Works cranks had me giggling, like 'how did you get here?' I dig the color, it's not Yellow it's not Orange it's Yeorange.
#1352
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Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: NYC
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Bikes: '72 Raleigh Super Course; '90 Cannondale ST1000; '98/99 Cannondale T700; 2002 Cannondale CAAD5 R700; 2022 Cannondale Topstone 2L
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Mostly wrapped up rebuilding my ST1000 today. It's been in disarray post-RAGBRAI 2022. I've made quite a few changes to that setup.
There's more gold accenting via the KMC chain, XC Pro cantis, and Sansin hubs. I used some clear black Nissen cable housing which doesn't call too much attention to itself while looking quite good. I delayed work while looking for Superbe Pro micro-ratcheting downtube shifters, but decided to use barcons until I find some (does anyone have a lead?). The wheelset and Superbe Pro pedals are from another ST1000 I found recently. I love the look of Suntour's endless band clamp, so I found a 31.8 band attached to a Sprint derailleur, then scored a NOS Cyclone MKII without a clamp to match the RD. 3x7 gearing, 50-42-28 x 13-30 freewheel. I love the hard edge of the fork crown versus an otherwise smooth frame. The 45mm VO faceted fenders really help emphasize that relationship. Brooks microfiber tape, SOMA replacement hoods for the Superbe levers. The seatpost and stem and bars are all by Nitto. The stem is original, with "Pat. Pending" on the little triangular wedge that the clamp bolt screws into. The only Shimano parts on the bike are the downtube cable stops.
Cables still need to be trimmed and capped at their final lengths. I think the current tires are 23 or 25mm which is way too narrow. I'm thinking 32mm GP 4 Seasons, or something similar. I'm usually a tan wall fan, but black tires work here, especially with the anodized rims. I also plan on changing the headset, these have a 26.4 crown race, yeah? The front cable hanger is a Ritchey (by Dia Compe) that has the TR logo carved into it, which is cool because those are also my initials. I have another in silver that I'll swap in when I change the headset. I'd been after the silver one for a while but they're absurdly priced on eBay ($100 min. usually) but lucked into one. I also have a third that's silver with the TR silkscreened onto it, but the logo is fading.
There's more gold accenting via the KMC chain, XC Pro cantis, and Sansin hubs. I used some clear black Nissen cable housing which doesn't call too much attention to itself while looking quite good. I delayed work while looking for Superbe Pro micro-ratcheting downtube shifters, but decided to use barcons until I find some (does anyone have a lead?). The wheelset and Superbe Pro pedals are from another ST1000 I found recently. I love the look of Suntour's endless band clamp, so I found a 31.8 band attached to a Sprint derailleur, then scored a NOS Cyclone MKII without a clamp to match the RD. 3x7 gearing, 50-42-28 x 13-30 freewheel. I love the hard edge of the fork crown versus an otherwise smooth frame. The 45mm VO faceted fenders really help emphasize that relationship. Brooks microfiber tape, SOMA replacement hoods for the Superbe levers. The seatpost and stem and bars are all by Nitto. The stem is original, with "Pat. Pending" on the little triangular wedge that the clamp bolt screws into. The only Shimano parts on the bike are the downtube cable stops.
Cables still need to be trimmed and capped at their final lengths. I think the current tires are 23 or 25mm which is way too narrow. I'm thinking 32mm GP 4 Seasons, or something similar. I'm usually a tan wall fan, but black tires work here, especially with the anodized rims. I also plan on changing the headset, these have a 26.4 crown race, yeah? The front cable hanger is a Ritchey (by Dia Compe) that has the TR logo carved into it, which is cool because those are also my initials. I have another in silver that I'll swap in when I change the headset. I'd been after the silver one for a while but they're absurdly priced on eBay ($100 min. usually) but lucked into one. I also have a third that's silver with the TR silkscreened onto it, but the logo is fading.
#1353
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Join Date: May 2013
Location: Kips Bay, NY
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Bikes: Ritchey Swiss Cross | Teesdale Kona Hot | Haro Extreme | Specialized Stumpjumper Comp | Cannondale F1000 | Shogun 1000 | Cannondale M500 | Norco Charger | Marin Muirwoods 29er | Shogun Kaze | Breezer Lightning
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95 M500 w Pepperoni fork. Effortlessly light weight
#1354
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Join Date: May 2022
Location: USA - Southwest PA
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Bikes: Cannondale - Gary Fisher - Giant - Litespeed - Schwinn Paramount - Schwinn (lugged steel) - Trek OCLV
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60, 58, 56 (official) I've found that Cannondales fit and ride 1 or 2 cm smaller.
I have read that Cannondale measured their official size from the top of the BB to the top of the seat tube, and it seems to work.
2.8's ride good with the carbon or steel forks, but maybe not so much with aluminum.
The frames are a joy to look at with all the manipulated tubing, pretty special back then.
I have read that Cannondale measured their official size from the top of the BB to the top of the seat tube, and it seems to work.
2.8's ride good with the carbon or steel forks, but maybe not so much with aluminum.
The frames are a joy to look at with all the manipulated tubing, pretty special back then.
( I rode aluminum, OCLV carbon, and steel road bikes at the time - they all rode similar ... choice of tires seemed to make the most difference ... ? ... but in my small sizes (53cm Cannondales, 52cm Trek OCLV, small (?) lugged Columbus SL tubed Schwinn Peloton) maybe that is to be expected (?)
I did have another issue with the fork however - it was twisted ... had not crashed the bike so apparently it was built that way
the aluminum fork on my 3.0 was fine (it was later checked)
Last edited by t2p; 08-10-23 at 09:46 AM.
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#1355
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1986 sr800
Size 58. It came to me with TTT 38cm bars and 90mm stem. Now has Cinelli stem and bars. Also came with Superbe Pro hubs on Saturae rims instead of the GP4s. I have plans to change that. I'd worry about finding Superbe Pro pedals if Eroica CA permitted Cannondales
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I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs.
I don't do: disks, tubeless, e-shifting, or bead head nymphs.
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#1357
Full Member
I've been meaning to post an in-the-wild shot of these two.
Great do-it-all bikes, plenty of room for tires, and light as well.
1996 T400
cheers -mathias
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#1360
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#1361
only here for the "LIKES"
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'85 SR500 (CC date code)
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#1362
Edumacator
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1987 Crest Cannondale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin Performance EL, 1990ish Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 1982 AD SLE, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Competition, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 Cannondale M500, 1984 Mercian, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi (model unknown), 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super
1987 Crest Cannondale, 1987 Basso Gap, 1992 Rossin Performance EL, 1990ish Van Tuyl, 1985 Trek 670, 1982 AD SLE, 2003 Pinarello Surprise, 1990ish MBK Atlantique, 1987 Peugeot Competition, 1987 Nishiki Tri-A, 1981 Faggin, 1996 Cannondale M500, 1984 Mercian, 1982 AD SuperLeicht, 1985 Massi (model unknown), 1988 Daccordi Griffe , 1989 Fauxsin MTB, 1981 Ciocc Mockba, 1992 Bianchi Giro, 1977 Colnago Super
#1363
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Bikes: 1984 Miyata 310, 1986 Schwinn Sierra, 2011 Jamis Quest, 1980 Peugeot TH8 Tandem, 1992 Performance Parabola, 1987 Ross Mt. Hood, 1988 Schwinn LeTour, 1988 Trek 400T, 1981 Fuji S12-S LTD, 197? FW Evans
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Mine has a 1989 serial number, but it has 1990 features. It has six speed Accu-Shift and an SR Oval Tech crankset.
Cannondale ST400
Cannondale ST400
#1364
Full Member
Repeat offender here: One of the twin T400s from a few posts up was pressed into road service for the 350 mile DALMAC ride from Lansing, MI to the Mackinac bridge.
I had planned to ride a Motobécane Grand Touring but it popped a spoke a week before the start, and I decided to play it safe and take a known-good bike.
Much like my ST600, these do just about anything well, with the T400 probably being the better tourer, and the ST a little more lively. But these are nits.
I swapped in a different front wheel and mounted 32 mm GP5000s, pumped to sixty or seventy pounds. It was a lovely ride even over deteriorated pavement.
Shown here on the shore of Lake Michigan, approx SW of the Bridge. A wonderful riding day with 20 mph tailwinds.
cheers -mathias
I had planned to ride a Motobécane Grand Touring but it popped a spoke a week before the start, and I decided to play it safe and take a known-good bike.
Much like my ST600, these do just about anything well, with the T400 probably being the better tourer, and the ST a little more lively. But these are nits.
I swapped in a different front wheel and mounted 32 mm GP5000s, pumped to sixty or seventy pounds. It was a lovely ride even over deteriorated pavement.
Shown here on the shore of Lake Michigan, approx SW of the Bridge. A wonderful riding day with 20 mph tailwinds.
cheers -mathias
#1365
Shifting is fun!
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R900 I built up many years ago, when I had just discovered that old racing bikes were fun, and didn't yet know what "drive side pics" were.
Took it out for quite a few long rides, but man, it was harsh. The old and hard 20mm or so tires didn't help, and neither did the small frame size and the flat-ish bars.
The frame is still somewhere in my garage:
Took it out for quite a few long rides, but man, it was harsh. The old and hard 20mm or so tires didn't help, and neither did the small frame size and the flat-ish bars.
The frame is still somewhere in my garage:
#1366
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R900 I built up many years ago, when I had just discovered that old racing bikes were fun, and didn't yet know what "drive side pics" were.
Took it out for quite a few long rides, but man, it was harsh. The old and hard 20mm or so tires didn't help, and neither did the small frame size and the flat-ish bars.
The frame is still somewhere in my garage:
Took it out for quite a few long rides, but man, it was harsh. The old and hard 20mm or so tires didn't help, and neither did the small frame size and the flat-ish bars.
The frame is still somewhere in my garage:
My criterium-geometry Bianchi Specialissima was at least as harsh-riding as any Cannondale Crit Series bike I ever rode. Thank goodness all the companies pushing crit-geometry bikes (i.e., Cannondale and Italian companies and a few others) eventually switched back to less punishing designs.
#1368
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This no name crankset from ebay:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/284241938033
I swapped the stock rings for a set of Sugino 46/34 rings that I had. The crankset takes a 103mm bb and needed its pedal threads chased. It looked like a demo of some kind.
#1369
Full Member
Michigan State University has its own bike shop. It's not a co-op but it has some similarities -- one of them being that people bring in bicycles to donate.
So someone brought in two Cannondales -- his & hers. Let's start with hers, which is cool enough in its own right. It even came with its spec sheet! It's a seriously tiny frame and I think it's cute as a button. I'd' buy it for my 5 foot nothing kid if it were an ST... she already has a Terry style tiny road bike that we got from the same place. To be continued....
So someone brought in two Cannondales -- his & hers. Let's start with hers, which is cool enough in its own right. It even came with its spec sheet! It's a seriously tiny frame and I think it's cute as a button. I'd' buy it for my 5 foot nothing kid if it were an ST... she already has a Terry style tiny road bike that we got from the same place. To be continued....
#1370
Full Member
But the donation that REALLY blew up my skirt is this originally equipped, super cool 1986 ST600. Cool to me, anyway.
Sorry about the partial sun -- best I could do with customers coming in and out. This puppy is straight out of the catalog:
[Thank you, vintagecannondale.com!]
And the reason I'm so stoked about this find is shown in the image below.
The twenty-five-incher in front is mine
It's a good thing the 23" one wasn't for sale, because an employee already bought it.
Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn.
I need another Cannondale the way I need mumps.
Check it out.
cheers -mathias
Sorry about the partial sun -- best I could do with customers coming in and out. This puppy is straight out of the catalog:
[Thank you, vintagecannondale.com!]
And the reason I'm so stoked about this find is shown in the image below.
The twenty-five-incher in front is mine
It's a good thing the 23" one wasn't for sale, because an employee already bought it.
Thou shalt not muzzle the ox that treadeth out the corn.
I need another Cannondale the way I need mumps.
Check it out.
cheers -mathias
Last edited by steine13; 09-22-23 at 07:59 PM.
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#1372
Deraill this!
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Not sure where I’ll go with this one. Yeah, new old stock 1994 frame
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#1374
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In the 80s I worked at Action Cyclery in Streamwood IL. We at the time were the largest cannondale dealer. I guess we bought into the concept early. I loved the Forrest green color so I had Weiler Cycleworks paint it, I put a campy group on it. So.. a few years ago I set out to rebuild that same bike I sold decades ago. Its almost identical other than the more modern Mavic rims, tires etc.
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From Illinois. Collector of many fine bicycles from all over the world. Subscribe to my Youtube channel. Just search John's vintage road bike garage
From Illinois. Collector of many fine bicycles from all over the world. Subscribe to my Youtube channel. Just search John's vintage road bike garage
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