cycling utah Oct/Nov. 2000
By Greg Overton
We were talking with a customer the other day about the various
Campagnolo groups that were offered to the buying public over the years. He was
asking where this group and where that group fell in the company's lineup from
top to bottom. So we decided that sounded like an easy, er, great idea for the
next Classic Corner.
If you go
way back to the beginning of the company, there were various groups offered
through the years, with names like Cambio Corsa and Roubaix, that were very
rare in the United States. As a result, not many of these parts have seen the
light of day here other than in the hands of selfish collectors who will not
share. So we'll just talk about the ones that you may have a chance of coming
across.
In the sixties, Campy
offered the Record group for the discerning racer. It was the top of the line,
bettering Simplex in the minds of the racing crowd, except for the French
racing crowd. Below Record, and offered on many mass produced bikes, was the
Valentino group. Named after the son of Tullio Campagnolo, this group was
simpler, mostly steel and much less expensive. Valentino is now the head of the
company that his father began.
In
1968, Campy released the first Nuovo Record groups. This is the component group
that really made the company stand head and shoulders above the rest. It was
beautifully crafted of aluminum, ornately engraved and totally serviceable. As
a result, many of these groups are still around and a surprising number are
still being used.
Just below
Nuovo Record was Gran Sport. Offered as an eventual replacement for Valentino,
this group was similar to Nuovo Record in many ways, including appearance. But
Gran Sport had less polishing and finish work, and several design differences
to cut costs. It was offered on a number of mass-produced bikes, but never
really caught fire, as Japanese manufacturers were beginning to make a mark at
the low end.
In 1972, Campy
released its Super Record group, with titanium derailleur pivots, bottom
bracket and pedal spindles, as well as alloy headset and bottom bracket cups.
Super Record was the ultimate, with all racers either using it or wishing they
were. No other parts group was even used in the professional
peloton, or
so it seemed. We've often wondered how many of these groups were produced from
1972 until its end in 1985.
The
Gran Sport, Nuovo and Super Record lineup stayed until 1985, with small
evolutionary changes, mostly mandated by the US government's safety patrol, the
Consumer Product Safety Commission. These changes mostly represent a lip here
and a rounded edge there to eliminate life threatening injury by a front
derailleur or similar component.
By
1985, Big Blue was feeling pinched by the Japanese with their quick-changing
designs and big-time marketing schemes. The Italian philosophy of making great
products and keeping the design current for a decade was being trounced by new
this and new that each year from the two warring Japanese rivals - Shimano and
Suntour.
Then things got ugly,
at least for Campy. It introduced Record C, known here for some reason as C
Record. The C stood for Corsa and the group was hailed as a total triumph.
Victory was declared once again at the very highest level of performance. Then
there was a slight problem with the revolutionary Delta brake, something about
the cable not holding or some silly little thing.
No problem. There was a stash of Super Record brakes left, so
we'll just stick a blue stone on the front of the pivot bolt, call it Cobalto
and charge good money for it. It worked! Everybody loved 'em, and they still do
today. The Record C group was saved, and the company's reputation actually
elevated, for the time being.
Campy
floundered a bit for groups to place beneath Record C. There was a brief stint
for Gran Sport again, then came Victory and Triomphe. These were almost
identical, and in the minds of consumers they were invisible. There were a good
number of bikes equipped with these groups as a package, so there are some
parts out there, and the groups are actually pretty cool. But they were more
like Nuovo Record than Record C, and everyone wanted the new look, not the
old.
So the company regrouped
and in '88 it released Chorus and Athena. Chorus occupied the space below
Record C, with some of the same features and a lot of the same look. Athena was
similar in style, but less similar in actual features. These were both great
performing groups, and fairly affordable as well. Record C was still the
leader, and now had the way cool Delta brakes with the kinks worked out.
But alas, the Japanese had indexed
shifting! What?! Here we go again. Okay Campy can do index shifting, and we'll
call it Synchro, uh and well, uh it needs some work.
So all derailleurs had to be redesigned to
index well, but in the meantime, something had to be done to satisfy this fast
changing marketplace. Several versions of reworked Chorus and Athena
derailleurs came and went. Heck, even a whole new group was introduced. Croce
D'Aune (Crocha Downay) was the mountain pass where Tullio's frozen fingers
helped inspire the mother of all inventions, the quick release skewer and now
became the name of the new group between Record (no C now) and Chorus. The
Croce rear derailleurs are way cool with a little push rod down the side to
help indexing capability. It worked okay, and had its own Delta brake, but
didn't last long.
So Campy
settled on the Record, Chorus and Athena pecking order until 1992, when Ergo
shifting came along, and the return of Big Blue began.
Although it was more than a year behind
the release of Shaman's STI shifter, Campy's Ergo was well accepted and has
been ever since. In keeping with company philosophy, these shifters are owner
rebuildable, gear capacity is interchangeable and were triple compatible from
the start.
In the nineties, the
order of the Campagnolo world has been pretty much the same, with Record at the
top, followed by Chorus, Athena, then Veloce,
Mirage, and for a short
time, Avanti and Stratos. We believe Campy thought they were Japanese for a
year or so, and had to offer ten different levels of components.
But since then, the lineup has been
consistent from Mirage to Record. The only recent change has been the switch
from Athena to Daytona starting in 2000.
Now it will be fun to see what
changes come next.
Will it be
electronic shifting? We've heard rumors of a system that uses the upper pulley
wheel in the rear derailleur as a generator, so no batteries, and quite
possibly no wires! There is apparently a new single pivot brake coming soon.
Maybe they will resurrect the Croce D'Aune name for this stuff, we always liked
that one.