They look to be inspired by these, from Serotta. Not that there's anything wrong with that. They look nice and probably work better. They look like they'd be really stuff and solid.
Yes, I want Gaulzetti.
Dropout.jpg
They look to be inspired by these, from Serotta. Not that there's anything wrong with that. They look nice and probably work better. They look like they'd be really stuff and solid.
Yes, I want Gaulzetti.
Dropout.jpg
La Cheeserie!
La Cheeserie!
the serotta 3d drop-outs were fucking great. i had two csi track frames with the track version of them. honestly, ricky and i never talked about them or anyone else's drop-outs when we were mulling the design over. we went back and forth a few times with the design- me asking him to make sure we were able to still use a quick release properly- him making sure we have drop-out we could use across the size range and allow us to make it in house in a repeatable fashion that'd allow us to build straight stiff bikes.
in short i'm psyched with it.
What Craig said. As a Serotta alum I instantly recognized their similarity to the 3DXL, but that's a good thing. Those drops always worked well, never had a problem and look great. Ricky designed an item that works well and machines well. Good design wins out.
Well, we've been focusing completely on the road bikes recently and keep pushing the cross project down the docket. We'll get there this spring, I think. Stay tuned.
Has the focus on the road stuff been more on the development of the current frames or on a totally new model/s?
I dig the discs & paint scheme.
sporco uccello... danfango... corsa suino
It's been cool watching the refinement of the Corsa over the past few years. I look forward to seeing what is coming and maybe one day I can get one. Thanks.
i go back and forth on this all the time. honestly, the corsa is the best road bike i have ever ridden and that surprises me because to me it isn't even close to perfectly evolved. i can't make a better race bike out of any material and i have tried. i've needed to shift my focus to small refinements that'll improve the bike slowly and incrementally. i kind of find it analogous to the state of modern american literature. there are not going to be any "great books" produced for the next few years or even decades due to cultural constraints and the state of advancement and decline in the literacy and knowledge base of the world. the best we can hope for and achieve are "little victories"- small perfected morsels of competence and evolution.....i'm biulding race bikes and they are completely competent- my job as i see it now is not to rest on my (limited) laurels but rather to make production easier, distribution easier and keep me and my brand out there and relevant.
i be iterating and shit.....
I think it's been about a year since the Bicycling Magazine article came out and your brand has received a little more exposure. I get comments from random people on the road like "your bike is really awesome", "you have the sweetest bike of everyone here", "i've been admiring your bike all morning". I suspect it's because people recognize the brand and its not just the paint (although a group of young female runners were gushing over how sparkly the paint was one recent morning).
I guess what I'm trying to get at is: You gave us an estimation/account of how you had grown the previous year and where you were expecting to go this past year. Have you met your own expectations in terms of growth and development? Where do you see Gaulzetti going forward aside from production improvement/refinement?
Auk's words to live by:
Blow up and pin a picture of M. Bartoli on your wall. When you achieve that position, stop. Until then, stretch, ride, stretch, ride, eat less, and ride more.
growth has been just where it needs to be to keep us on top of figuring out how to get more efficient in the details of production, sales and fulfillment. i still don't think we're a household name even within the niche of small independent frame builders but that's ok. i'm building and designing race bikes- not retail goods or commodities. i'm not going to change what i do or change the bike in any way unless it makes the thing a better race bike. the more i do this- the more i look at people like andy walser as a model rather than say, the big guys or even fellow nahbs exhibitors.
Two statements which - as an owner of a bike from one of your fellow NAHBS exhibitors, as someone who has one of your bikes on the way and as someone who prefers to own a bikes that even the clued up folk won't necessarily know what it is - make me happy I chose a Cazzo.
IIII WALSER SPORT IIII
Quite the model for those who aren't familiar with the name. Three sizes of frames built for pure speed that have been ridden by more pros than you realize. I want a Model 7 track even though I have absolutely no business being on it.
To add to these last couple of comments and my initial question/statement. Stopped at a bridge today and two guys pull up and one says "I was just talking your bike and how I want it to be my next bike". I'm glad the word is getting around and I'm very glad your current focus is staying consistent with your initial plan: to build the best riding bike in the world. I personally think you've accomplished that.
Auk's words to live by:
Blow up and pin a picture of M. Bartoli on your wall. When you achieve that position, stop. Until then, stretch, ride, stretch, ride, eat less, and ride more.
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