Cyclist

Stuff of Legend

Italian artisan Marco Bertoletti kicks off a new series in which gets the builders behind the bikes to show us their favourite creations. Meet the Legend Il ’58

- Words JAMES SPENDER Photograph­y GARETH IWAN JONES

anned, lithe and informally dressed in sweater and skinny jeans, Marco Bertoletti could easily be mistaken for a retired pro racer. Certainly there’s nothing about him that hints at his age. Except the bike he’s brought with him.

‘This is the Il ’58,’ says Bertoletti, positively beaming as he rocks back on his heels to better appraise the bicycle in front of him. ‘The 58 refers to my age. I was born on 8th May 1958, and in 2016 I was 58, and I presented this bike on the 8th May. In that sense I’m lucky I wasn’t born in 1991, because that would be a long time to wait and I might not make it!’

Bertoletti has been building frames since 1989 and, while he only struck up the ‘Legend by Bertoletti’ marque in 2009, he’s no stranger to celebratin­g the odd special occasion with a fancy bike. A year or so ago (in issue 41) we were lucky enough to test the Venticinqu­esimo, a £12,000 carbontube­d, titanium-lugged bike built to mark Bertoletti’s 25th year in the bike-building business.

‘I have two other bikes, the Venti and a carbon HT, but the Il ’58 is my favourite. It’s made from my favourite material – titanium – and it is the epitome of what I think a bike should look like. I am a classicist when it comes to frame shapes. All these space age-looking bikes might be perfectly engineered, but when fashions change they will look tired. This classic aesthetic can always be appreciate­d over time.’

Between the lines

As simple as the Il ’58 appears, it’s actually a highly nuanced bicycle. Neat aesthetic touches abound, such as the carbon fibre in-laid dropouts and engraved bottom bracket, but it’s arguably the tubeset that has seen the most refinement.

For a titanium bike the tubes are noticeably skinny, and a cursory look over the smooth welds – the product of 14 laborious hours spent with a handfile and emery paper – shows the tube ends taper in interestin­g places.

‘The diameter of many of the tubes decreases as you go from the front to the rear of the frame,’ says Bertoletti. ‘For example, the top tube tapers from 34.9mm at the head tube to 31.8mm at the seat tube. They’re also doublebutt­ed – 0.5mm wall thickness in the middle and 0.75mm at the ends.’

Bertoletti sources the tubes from Reynolds in the UK. As per virtually all titanium frames, those tubes are 3/2.5 (grade 9), however the dropouts and bottom bracket have been machined from 6/4 titanium (grade 5). The head tube is oversized as per current trends towards stiffness, but interestin­gly the bottom bracket is a very standard British threaded.

‘We make the bottom bracket in Italy, and it is threaded because it is just better to have threads, it is simple as that. The other bottom brackets are 90% marketing and 10% problems!’

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