Bianchi Bicycle Serial Numbers
Vintage bianchi bike serial numbers. Sears Allstate 50s and 60s Motorcycles, Scooters and Mopeds from Sheldon's EMU. Vintage bianchi bike serial numbers. Museum bicycles from 1875 to 1944 on display at Classic Cycle, a bike shop and museum on Bainbridge Island, located near Seattle.
I need identifying this Bianchi frame. I picked up this steel Bianchi from a friend. He was not the original owner, and doesn't know much about bikes. It's a steel welded Bianchi frame. I doubt all the parts are original. It has Voloce shifters, and Athena brakes. The serial number stamped on the underside of the BB is A90901851. May 02, 2018 This is my first post to this group.Just got this Bianchi. The Serial #B009140 is on the bottom bracket. It was represented to me as a 1986 model. It has complete Campy Group and Columbus tubing. Bianchi serial numbers. By cmg in forum Bianchi Replies: 5 Last Post:, 02:23 PM. Bianchi without a serial number?
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I picked up a vintage Bianchi today off of craigslist and I am hoping some of you here may have more knowledge than I to help identify it. I was told that it is a 70's era Bianchi, but I can't find too much through googling to id it. It has all Campy components, but I am thinking it may have been re-painted at some point since I can't find another Bianchi in this color. The serial number is 2C61006. I tried to get some detailed photos to help. Any info anyone can give me is appreciated. Thanks!
Several years ago, I was given this bike by someone I'm no longer in touch with. I'd like to sell it as it's too small for me.
This is what I do know:
It's an older racing type bike
Floor to top of seat post - 30 inches (76 cm?)
Center of pedal to top of seat post - 20 inches (50.8?)
Horizontal across top bar, center of post to center of seat post - 21 inches (53.34?)
I was told it's a 12 Speed Formula Two with European style tires. The back tire says Ambrosio 19 extra Elite and the tires are 25 inches.
People keep asking me more questions about it, and I don't know the answers!
How old is it?
What model?
Is it a specialissima frame? (a whaaat?)
Is it numbered, and where?
Are the pedals an upgrade?
What else do I need to know to advertise it?
Some folks have told me that it's only worth $100, and some say Big! Bucks!
When I figure out what it is, what do I ask for it?
More pics
Thanks!
That said
It is worth what someone will pay for it.
On Craigslist, not so much. On eBay, with someone keen on that frame particular frame - a lot more.
I worked for a certified Colnago dealer, which was a privilege not easy to come by (be bestowed??).
Price it at $200 on eBay, with pick-up free, or bicycle packing and shipping by a local reputable bike shop near you matching their fee (call and confirm price.)
If no one buys it. Re-list on eBay at a lower price point.
My understanding is that frames get lighter and more ergonomical every year, so someone has to really really want that particular frame.
What pedals does it have? Those are not clear from the pics.
posted by jbenben at 12:23 AM on October 8, 2012 [1 favorite]
Bianchi Bike By Serial Number
I would put a better seat on it too.
posted by lee at 1:01 AM on October 8, 2012
Yours lacks most of the detailing that would indicate custom construction. The gruppo (cranks, chainrings, derailleurs, brakes) are lower-grade generics and it looks like the pedal, saddles and brakes were replaced by previous owners. At a guess, this would be the sort of bike sold to a family as their kid's first 'serious' bicycle, or to a fair-weather recreational cyclist.
This looks to be a decently well-kept 1980s-era road bike. Some googling indicates that Bianchi made Formula 2 bikes in the 1980s. I am guessing there's not much information about it because it's not one of Bianchi's high-quality models that would garner interest among collectors. I can't help you further since I'm not well versed in Italian makes.
posted by ardgedee at 3:07 AM on October 8, 2012
posted by needled at 3:25 AM on October 8, 2012
posted by JJ86 at 5:49 AM on October 8, 2012
posted by werkzeuger at 5:51 AM on October 8, 2012
Measure the frame size along the seat tube, from the center of the bottom bracket to the center of the top tube. You can say 'center-to-center' in your listing. Use centimeters. The small frame is also good for the fixie market, since women's sizes are hard to come by.
Look for tire sizes on the tires. Here's more than you ever wanted to know about tire sizes, but just verify the numbers you find on the tires are on one of those lists and you've found it.
I'd call it a road bike, not a racing bike.
The green patch on the seat tube specifies what steel was used for the tubing, which is helpful to know and should be in your listing. That there is a patch at all is a good sign.
Can you identify the components? Anything made by Campagnolo is usually good.
There might be a serial number stamped on the frame. Often it's on the underside of the bottom bracket.
posted by hydrophonic at 7:22 AM on October 8, 2012
- take your measurements and get the seat at the correct height. there's a 90% chance you have it too low. replace the saddle with something modern and minimally padded while you're at it; almost anything would be an improvement over that sad padded 80s thing, even used.
- fix those bars! ugh, the brake levers are annoyingly high up the drops, they should point mostly out, not up. this will make the bike feel 1-2cm longer. get rid of the crappy plastic bar tape.
The paint job looks decent actually and I can't see anything wrong with the drivetrain. It's not worth much but with some upgrades it would be totally functional. If you're still too big for that bike it will make some short woman very happy, because used road bikes that small are a little tough to come across.
posted by slow graffiti at 7:26 AM on October 8, 2012
That said, if you're selling on craigslist, look at other bikes on craigslist from the same era in your area and price accordingly. In my area you could probably get 220-250 for it from someone who really wants a pink bike that fits them (as someone else said, its hard to find small road bikes).
posted by czytm at 8:24 AM on October 8, 2012
posted by chrisulonic at 10:49 AM on October 8, 2012
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