Re: [CR]Re: Cinelli Production

(Example: Humor:John Pergolizzi)

In-Reply-To: <8C960B65DD9B02C-120C-2BB7@WEBMAIL-MB20.sysops.aol.com>
References: <MONKEYFOODGaVM7TVHR00002043@monkeyfood.nt.phred.org> <a06240839c2680d2a13a1@[66.81.49.138]> <1368228575-1178758281-cardhu_blackberry.rim.net-1557933020-@bwe050-cell00.bisx.prod.on.blackberry>
Date: Wed, 9 May 2007 20:38:21 -0700
To: oroboyz@aol.com, cinelliguy@earthlink.net, classicrendezvous@bikelist.org
From: "Jan Heine" <heine94@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: [CR]Re: Cinelli Production


At 9:04 PM -0400 5/9/07, oroboyz@aol.com wrote:
> <<
> Anyway I was thinking 10 percent?>>
>
>
>Wow, that would be amazing for a little bike shop 1/2 way round the
>world, in a broader cultural climate that could care less about
>bicycles, and Cinelli being so amazingly world-famous...

Cupertino was small, but they moved a lot of bikes. Ernest Csuka estimates that they and a few other North American shops sold almost 350 Singers in the 1970s, which is more than 10% of the total production from 1939-2007!* All that in a few bike boom years. (Of course, those were frames only, which took much less time to make than the bikes Singer sold in France.)

Another question is how famous Cinelli really was around the world... I know in Germany, where I grew up, they were considered the Holy Grail by many, and the same applies here in the U.S., of course. But in France, everybody knows Colnago, but Cinelli is relatively unknown. What about Italy, Britain, etc.?

Note: I am not saying that Cinelli is not world-famous, but simply asking the question.

Jan Heine Editor Bicycle Quarterly 140 Lakeside Ave #C Seattle WA 98122 http://www.bikequarterly.com

* The current total of Singer production is 3382. There were some "off-the-books" bikes during the war, so the actual number probably is about 100-150 higher.