From: Douglas R. Brooks <dbrk@troi.cc.rochester.edu>
To: classicrendezvous@bikelist.org (Classic Rendevous)
Date: Tue, 27 Mar 2001 13:58:12 -0500 (EST)
Subject: [CR]Gitane, Taylor Tourers and Value
Classicpals,
I put the first bid on the 1972 Gitane Tourer
that's now on eBay, though I'll not likely
get engaged in this in a way that comes close
to the reserve (unmentioned but suggested
by the Buy It Now to be at least over 1.5K? Justa' guess).
Here's the URL:
http://ebay.com/<blah
I've also admired the Taylor, already noted: $2400 or thereabouts.
There is a Buy It Now price on the Gitane for 2K.
I'm certainly Francophile enough to like many things
about the Gitane, which for no rational reasons I would
perfer over the Taylor (like I said, Francophile...).
I look at modern offerings of tourers,
and I mean the modern bikes with only contemporary parts and
values (such as the Cannondales, etc., recently appearing in
the BikeCentennial magazine---I can never remember its modern name)
and I see none of those I would like to ride or own.
I look at these two and I think I would be delighted to own either.
I mean, it's not as if I don't think the moderns ride nicely or work well,
but they are just not for me.
I look at the moderns prices and I shrink.
I look at the vintage bikes and their eBay costs
and, again, I shrink!
But here is my point (if I have one): If I were going to not shrink
and spend the money it apparently takes to have a complete pre-built
bike, I could see myself spending (the now imaginary) money
on the vintage rides. I wouldn't spend that on the moderns what with
their aluminum tubes or lugless (=soulless, to me...) frames and
inelegant solutions (lots of riser stems, terrible fender lines, etc.).
I feel differently about "race" bikes.
In that realm, I am not so put off by techno-latest-greatest.
I'm wondering if that makes the least bit of sense: why I think "new"
tourers are so darn unappealing and race bikes (I confess to having
more than one) I can enjoy in vintage or modern terms (but prefer
vintage, friction, etc.)
go figuring and grateful for a place to vent, be vetted, and
ruminate in the comfort of Dale's living room,
Douglas Brooks
in PLEASE GET WARM HERE, PLEASE!! Canandaigua, NY