03-24-2022, 01:26 AM
After many years of debate, and many bikes passed on (whether due to price or location), I have finally taken the plunge and obtained a bike with a Campagnolo Cambio Corsa rear shifting system with the "sliding" rear hub design. This is by far my most reviled designs as far as actual shifting goes, but one of my most loved related to style and overall simplicity. Whoever managed to win or finish a race high in the standings deserves much respect and it exemplifies how strong of a rider they were. This will be a first and last cambio corsa bike unless someone wants to trade something in better condition and/or with more original parts.
There were a few back-pedalling rear mechs back in the day: late '20s-'30s Vittoria/Margherita; '30s Oscar Egg/Super Champion (early version), and I think Simplex came out with one in the early 30s similar to what is on my Baggi, but with the striker fork on top. The cambio corsa came out around 1933 under a different name (cambio bacchetta). I am not sure if it got much play back then, and I cannot recall seeing one on a 1930s bike. The cambio corsa name is from circa 1945 or later and it was being used and winning some races in the 40s; most notably Gina Bartali's 1948 Tour de France win. Another single rod version (une leve) was introduced later ('49?) with Fausto Coppi winning the 1950 Paris-Roubaix; and then named the "Paris-Roubaix" system. Both of these back-pedalling designs were amazingly still being produced as of the 1953 Campy catalog even though a few years earlier Campy had introduced the superb (for its time) Gran Sport chromed bronze knuckled parallelogram design derailleur which became the basic model for their rear mechs (nearly unchanged except for materials and looks) until the mid-80s. I believe that there were still so many "cambio corsa" frames made previously that some of Campy's top business partners requested that it remain available to relieve the glut of extra frames from years before since it was obsolete 5-10 years earlier with Simplex dominating that market until the Gran Sport was introduced ('50?). One good feature other than simplicity that makes this a good choice is the fact that there is no flimsy cage or mechanism that can be kicked and easily bent by an unscrupulous competitor knocking things out of whack which was a common practice during those days.
So I found this small salon brand Paglioli bike in Modena Italy, and were it not for a friend (Sergio) who finds me neat bike stuff (more on that later) and lived only a couple Km's from this bike's location, I would never have gotten it. Shipping is insane and I tried for 2 months to find a reasonable means to ship it, but the seller said the box was too big to ship Poste Italiane which provides a very reasonable rate for shipping larger boxes. Little did I know that the seller had it packed in a box with the rear wheel still attached to the frame making it a lot longer than it needed to be, and also leaving the saddle/post in the seat tube adding a fair amount of height to boot. Costs were running $750-$1200 for the shipping making it unfeasible given the cost of the bike itself. I had my friend survey the situation and found that it could be shipped in two much smaller boxes at 60 euros each so the deal was on again. The seller was quite old and was not comfortable using paypal or similar means of payment which created another problem and added extra fees to do a bank to bank transfer. Long story short: paypal the money to Sergio for a $5 fee and have him hand deliver the cash, while at the same time picking up the bike. Bike is now in transit; the first time it has left its hometown since it was also built in Modena. Sergio also provided a very hard to find head badge which is missing. The cheap pedals are being left in Italy; I feel no need to pay for the extra weight that they would add. The pump was spec'd by the seller as original, but it is obviously a 70s-80s Silca frame pump so although okay for use, it will be removed for authenticity purposes; and the crankset is of later manufacture. Other than that it appears to be original. I will be able to better date it from looking at some features, but I would guess 1948-1951 give or take. Universal brakeset; probably Mod. 39. It is missing the spoke guard which is important, but easily taken care of with many possible replacements (not Campy); Campy original goes for $100-$200, other brands $20 or so.
There were a few back-pedalling rear mechs back in the day: late '20s-'30s Vittoria/Margherita; '30s Oscar Egg/Super Champion (early version), and I think Simplex came out with one in the early 30s similar to what is on my Baggi, but with the striker fork on top. The cambio corsa came out around 1933 under a different name (cambio bacchetta). I am not sure if it got much play back then, and I cannot recall seeing one on a 1930s bike. The cambio corsa name is from circa 1945 or later and it was being used and winning some races in the 40s; most notably Gina Bartali's 1948 Tour de France win. Another single rod version (une leve) was introduced later ('49?) with Fausto Coppi winning the 1950 Paris-Roubaix; and then named the "Paris-Roubaix" system. Both of these back-pedalling designs were amazingly still being produced as of the 1953 Campy catalog even though a few years earlier Campy had introduced the superb (for its time) Gran Sport chromed bronze knuckled parallelogram design derailleur which became the basic model for their rear mechs (nearly unchanged except for materials and looks) until the mid-80s. I believe that there were still so many "cambio corsa" frames made previously that some of Campy's top business partners requested that it remain available to relieve the glut of extra frames from years before since it was obsolete 5-10 years earlier with Simplex dominating that market until the Gran Sport was introduced ('50?). One good feature other than simplicity that makes this a good choice is the fact that there is no flimsy cage or mechanism that can be kicked and easily bent by an unscrupulous competitor knocking things out of whack which was a common practice during those days.
So I found this small salon brand Paglioli bike in Modena Italy, and were it not for a friend (Sergio) who finds me neat bike stuff (more on that later) and lived only a couple Km's from this bike's location, I would never have gotten it. Shipping is insane and I tried for 2 months to find a reasonable means to ship it, but the seller said the box was too big to ship Poste Italiane which provides a very reasonable rate for shipping larger boxes. Little did I know that the seller had it packed in a box with the rear wheel still attached to the frame making it a lot longer than it needed to be, and also leaving the saddle/post in the seat tube adding a fair amount of height to boot. Costs were running $750-$1200 for the shipping making it unfeasible given the cost of the bike itself. I had my friend survey the situation and found that it could be shipped in two much smaller boxes at 60 euros each so the deal was on again. The seller was quite old and was not comfortable using paypal or similar means of payment which created another problem and added extra fees to do a bank to bank transfer. Long story short: paypal the money to Sergio for a $5 fee and have him hand deliver the cash, while at the same time picking up the bike. Bike is now in transit; the first time it has left its hometown since it was also built in Modena. Sergio also provided a very hard to find head badge which is missing. The cheap pedals are being left in Italy; I feel no need to pay for the extra weight that they would add. The pump was spec'd by the seller as original, but it is obviously a 70s-80s Silca frame pump so although okay for use, it will be removed for authenticity purposes; and the crankset is of later manufacture. Other than that it appears to be original. I will be able to better date it from looking at some features, but I would guess 1948-1951 give or take. Universal brakeset; probably Mod. 39. It is missing the spoke guard which is important, but easily taken care of with many possible replacements (not Campy); Campy original goes for $100-$200, other brands $20 or so.
I am ReapThaWimpWind and I view the world from a plexiglass window in my lower abdomen because my head is a sigmoidoscope always shoved up my....