The Cannondale track bikes from say 10 years ago have a totally classic, round blade, lugged steel fork made by 3-Rensho.
Joe Bender-Zanoni Great Notch, NJ I admit it- I own one and an Ibis Titanium Road 2 future classics
> Date: Thu, 20 Mar 2003 20:44:28 EST
> From:
> To: henox@icycle.net, Jpinkowish@aol.com,
> classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
> Subject: Re: [CR]UPS / FEDEX and the reality of "This End Up"
> Message-ID: <6c.2b8fb609.2babc87c@aol.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
> MIME-Version: 1.0
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
> Precedence: list
> Message: 15
>
>
> In a message on shipping, Phil Brown made one statement which is not quite
historically correct, I believe. He wrote, re shiping a bike without
damage:
> <snip>
>
> "I take a leaf from the Cannondale (boo, hiss, out of period)..."
>
> I keep trying to buy my friend's white, special, all Campy, factory
original (I think), Cannondale from the early days. NR or SR, I forget
which, but certainly pre-index. Homely, yes, but I'd let that slide under
the wire and into Cirque...
>
> But, I'm not trying to pick an argument, just making a point that
Cannondale's feet are in our period, even if the materials and production
methods are uncommon in our group... :-)
>
> harvey "contrarian" sachs
> mcLean va
>
>
>
> #################################################################
> #################################################################
> #################################################################
> #####
> #####
> #####
> #################################################################
> #################################################################
> #################################################################