Ambrosio Montreal Medaille d'Or  (Report Pending)
Back
Report
Main Photo
Category:  Rims
Name:  Ambrosio Montreal Medaille d'Or
Brand:  Ambrosio
Model:  Montreal Medaille d'Or
Years:  1976 - ?
Country:  Italy
Weight:  430 grams
Added By: CV-6 on 01/16/08
Updated By: Munny on 07/21/19
Additional Photos - click for full size
Ambrosio Montreal Medaille d'OrAmbrosio Montreal Medaille d'OrAmbrosio Montreal Medaille d'OrAmbrosio Montreal Medaille d'OrAmbrosio Montreal Medaille d'Or
 Verify Component Photos
Rim Type TubularMaterialAluminum
Rim Size700c (622 mm)Spoke Drillings32; 36
Label MarkingsAmbrosio Montreal Medaille d'Or -Made In Italy "Made In Europe" at valve holeValve DrillingPresta
Rim Height (mm)10Rim Outer Width (mm)20
EyeletsDoubleSeam Joint Welded
FinishBlack; Hard Anodized; Polished  
Wheel Lacing Data
Rim Size 700cERD 618mm
General Information
These rims were reportedly designed/marketed/named for the 1976 Montreal Olympics.  Possibly available in other finishes. 
Reported By:Rickyroule
Report Date:6/1/2015
Report Reason:Incorrect Content, They had been made first for the 1974 World Championship, I believe.
 
Quality:Rarity:
 
 
Outstanding Report Submitted  
Additional Resources
Resources:Reference & Charts
Component VariationsView Detailed List  Manage Variations
Variations of Component exist (Component is 1 of 6)BrandGroup
Ambrosio Montreal (first version)Ambrosio
Ambrosio Montreal - Mappamondo D'Oro - Premio internazionaleAmbrosio
Ambrosio Montreal Durex CronoAmbrosio
Ambrosio Montreal DurexAmbrosioMontreal rims
Ambrosio Montreal (yet another variation), Montreal rimsAmbrosioMontreal rims
Brand Information(click to expand)
The Ambrosio trademark is also being used by a UK company that produces components and accessories using the 1980's logo.

Doug Charles: "here is what I have been able to glean on the Ambrosio/3TTT relationship, all from third party sources. Ambrosio founded in the early 1900's in Turin initially making steel bars and stems, until the 1930's it was a large concern in the bike biz, but slowly started to fade. At some point, alloy bars, stems and rims are added to the mix. In the early 1960's, Piero Marzorati from Milan family buys Ambrosio to add it to their existing company which makes among other things, steel rims. Initially, bars and stems were made until the sons, Sergio and Maurizio take over in the late 1960's and push more emphasis on the rim side of the business. In the 1970's, rims are the biggest part of what they do. In 1961 (when Marzorati shows up?), long term employee, Mario Dedioniggi leaves Ambrosio and founds 'Turin Tube Technology', which is soon to become 'Techo Tubo Torino'. He also starts with steel bars and stems ... He soon converts to aluminum with Ergal coming in 1975 for the Superleggero bar. In 1985, Dedioniggi leaves and sell the brand to Antonio Colombo et al. Colombo founds a new company, so as not to compete directly with Cinelli with the plans to call it '3TTT S.p.A." but the clerk forgets the other two 'T's' and it becomes '3T' ...So, they appear to be parallel companies of the same parent in the 1960's-70's with ties, but not the same company and to this day, have different addresses."
 
User Comments
Sign-in Required
  Loading Comments


By pressing Verify below, you express verification that the photos shown are indeed of the component listed. Please do not verify if you are not sure that all photos are of the correct item. If you identify a photo that is NOT of the correct item, please use the Report feature to flag that photo.

Note: You can not verify photos that you have uploaded.
Campagnolo
VeloBase v.2.8.7 - a Fischer Frameworks application, Copyright © (2024) - All rights reserved.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.


Find the information on VeloBase.com useful? Please consider donating a few dollars towards the web-hosting cost. Thank you.