that is awesome... would love to view the book in quite minute with a coffee... so maybe one day i have to ride my CAAD5 to the netherlands to visit these folks xDIn 2021 a book came out named "The Cannondale Archives"
It is a very limited edition about the history from '71 to '21 and not available for the public.
I have seen one being offered on ebay for like $900 and then some.
In the Netherlands they have one for viewing at the office of the The Racefietsblog.nl
No sorrythe pong is crazy... do you know what the black one was? the one after the pong bike from the video?
Edit, that's funny, I just to live in Soest (the Netherlands)
I couldn't agree with you more on the quality of parts used inside the forks. I never once saw a hydraulic seal failure on aircraft that was caused by material degradation, only improper part installation or the few times I discovered fuel rated o-rings installed. If I really had the time to tear down and measure out all the different seals used in the Lefty and Headshok forks I am sure you could find aerospace grade ones to replace them.I believe it was his video on the Lefty that I watched last year. Yes @JohnnyD ”quirky” . My own experience with the headshock when new was disappointing; losing its air charge. Quickly. And from what I learned about the Lefty before I bought one was migrating bearings. Can they really be called “bearings”? More like rub strips.
But I have to say my first ride on a 15+ year old lefty that never had a proper service tear down impressed me. The seller told me after a gentle ride up and down the paved road in front of his house, “ride it again, but this time hit a curb head on at speed.” I did and was surprised that the Lefty took it and I felt almost nothing in my hands.
My biggest beef after seeing the inner parts of these things mirrors hydraulic brake parts experiences: low grade seals (packings, o-rings). Why? Cost per bike? Really? They could’ve charged less than $5 (Euro or Lb. equivalent) per bike and gotten aerospace quality seals that wouldn’t degrade from the type of fluid/oils they were being used in.
All that wasn’t meant to be contradictory @JohnnyD Modern forks probably are better. I have no experience to draw from.
What size do you need? I have a couple of Silk Road framesets in the basement. No idea what shipping would cost.these vintage headshock-bikes are perfect to rebuild them to gravelbikes. with gravelbikes you ride trough an environment, where the headshock was made for
have seen half a year ago an cad3 silkroad in bright shining orangeyellow with black decals... the price and contidion was perfect... and i was close to buy a train ticket and drive 700km to buy that nice bike... but hesitated too much and it was sold already, when i was ready^^
something like this
View attachment 11568View attachment 11567
thanks for that offer. but i'll find someday something here in germany. it just need some time and patience for the 'right' momentWhat size do you need? I have a couple of Silk Road framesets in the basement. No idea what shipping would cost.
I saw this today too.. Fun stuff.View attachment 12060
everytime i'm 'wasting' time on the cannondale topic... i find something impressive out of the cannondale world^^
on the cannondalebicycle-channel they released a video with old footage from the 70's about a bike trailer for kids.
In 2021 a book came out named "The Cannondale Archives"
It is a very limited edition about the history from '71 to '21 and not available for the public.
I have seen one being offered on ebay for like $900 and then some.
In the Netherlands they have one for viewing at the office of the The Racefietsblog.nl
I would say definitely worth it.... just found one of these CANNONDALE ARCHIVE BOOK – 200€.
is it worth it for you guys here?
it's even sealed...
located in france.