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The Mystique of Masi: From Vigorelli to Volumetrica

Since the dawn of competitive bicycle racing Italian frame builders have produced some of the world’s most painstakingly crafted and sought after machines. Of all the Italian brands desired by bicycle aficionados, vintage Masis turn up high on the list.

One of history’s premiere bicycle artisans, Faliero Masi started his trade after racing professionally in the Giro d’Italia and Milan San Remo races during the 1930s. His competitive experience helped Masi intuit what other racers wanted in their ideal bike while fueling his own desire for perfection among other builders.

The Vigorelli

Through the 1940s, Masi worked on various professional cycling teams as a mechanic while frequently building riders’ bikes to individual specs. By early 1950, Cicli Masi had located below the Vigorelli velodrome in Milan, Italy and was producing frames for some of the most legendary bicycle racers in history.

Masi, who was commonly referred to as “The Tailor”, built custom bikes for cycling titans such as Fausto Coppi, Jacques Anquetil, and Eddy Merckx. Although Masis were ridden by these legends, contractual obligations kept some from putting Masi transfers on their frames.

For example, Fausto Coppi was contracted with Bianchi, yet the frame he rode was actually a Masi. Eddy Merckx’s World Championship Faema bike was also born from the hands of Masi.

Tom Simpson and the former world hour record holder Ferdinand Bracke both rode Masis which were labeled Peugeots. These superstars of cycling trekked to the Vigorelli in search of The Tailor, who crafted the “mystique of Masi” one relationship at a time.

Early Masi models were named “Speciale Corsa”, and Vintage Velos has a pristine and extremely rare example of one from 1954. Following the Speciale Corsa, all Masis from the 50′s and 60′s were named “Special”.

Frames of this era were constructed with either Reynolds 531 tubing or Columbus double butted steel with French and Swiss lugs. Until the early 1960s, all Masis were hand made by Faliero himself. Masi frames of that era are the most collectible.

Frame design and tightly controlled geometries were details Masi paid particular attention to. He built frames based on the anticipated road conditions a rider would likely encounter in a race. When Masi built a frame for someone riding on the cobbled roads of Europe he designed it with longer rake angles and wheelbase for added stability and tracking.

Accordingly, Masi framesets sold in the U.S. were not necessarily the same as those produced for the likes of Merckx or other European racers. They instead featured build characteristics tuned for the often better paved and less demanding roads of the U.S. countryside.

Masi also constructed frames based on individual cyclist’s needs, not the industry standardized geometries so prevalent today. Masi’s experience and thorough understanding of professional bike racing were significant reasons why each bike that emerged from Cicli Masi donned the coveted World Championship stripes. His early customers were among the most demanding athletes in the world and they repeatedly won prestigious races aboard bikes born below the Vigorelli velodrome.

California Masi

In 1972, Masi brought his enterprise to the United States to take advantage of the blossoming interest in American cycling. Faliero’s son, Alberto, and his frame building master apprentice, the legendary Mario Confente, also came along to help grow the business.

Masi decided on moving to balmy Carlsbad, California and sold the Cicli Masi name and trademark to a group of American investors. In a recent VeloNews interview, Alberto Masi remarked that his father Faliero underestimated the market potential for racing bicycles in America.

For Masi collectors, or “Masiphiles”, the 1970s California bikes are regarded as some of the finest in company history. They had what no other builder offered the domestic market at the time: an undeniable Italian flair with a twist of custom American craftsmanship.

Master American builders like Brian Baylis, Jim Cunningham, Albert Eisentraut, Mike Howard and David Tesch were the hands behind many of the Masis built in the 70′s. Because of these various master craftsmen, California Masis had subtle differences in brazing technique, lug and dropout filing, and fork crown usage. Alberto Masi also built Gran Criterium frames in Milan during the late 1970s but the California models were regarded by many as higher quality.

Masi California frames of this period are described by modern collectors as “extraordinary” and “spectacular”, made in the “spirit of the Italian master but with the crispness of an American custom”. In fact, all Olympic medalists and most all of the World Track Champions who won their respective titles aboard Masi frames did so on Masi California frames.

California Masis were labeled on the bottom bracket with a “MC” designation followed by the frame size and serial number while Italian built frames had a “M” designation followed by the frame size, with the serial number on the fork steerer.

Greg Fletcher’s Masi site hosts a wealth of information on identifying and dating California Masis as provided by Brian Baylis, longtime Masi employee in the 1970s and proprietor of Vintage Cycle Studios.

Breaking Away

Of all the visible personalities who rode Masis in the 1970’s, Dave Stohler was perhaps the most recognizable in the United States. His Ferrari red 1978 Masi Gran Criterium, a model originally introduced in 1970, was unmistakable in the Oscar winning movie Breaking Away.

The images of Dave cruising through Morgan-Monroe Forest near Bloomington, Indiana, and racing against the infamous Italian Cinzano team converted thousands of young Americans into cycling disciples. The greatest number of Gran Criteriums were built at the Carlsbad facility in the 70’s, with Breaking Away helping propel the model to become Masi’s most popular ever.

According to Indiana University… the Little 500 bicycle race began in 1951 as a fundraiser for scholarship money for working students. The race was created by the late Howard S. “Howdy” Wilcox, who patterned it after the Indianapolis 500, which his father had won in 1919. He was inspired by a bicycle race he saw involving students racing around a dormitory, with several women leaning out of windows and cheering them on.
Breaking Away trivia

Like James Bond and his clever Aston Martin, The Bandit and his tire-scorching Trans-Am, and Marlon Brando and his rebel Thunderbird, Dave Stohler’s Gran Criterium was the envy of all then-modern day heroes. So incredible was it that the bike enabled its Cutter rider to achieve 60mph drafting behind a Cinzano semi – while in its small chainring!

Bianchi couldn’t do that. Neither could De Rosa. Was it the magic of movie making, or was it simply the legend of a Masi? Either way, with a nudge from Hollywood the mystique of Masi turned it into the most desired racing machine the cycling world had ever seen.

from ebay, an auction in progress

Differences in Philosophy

While Masi was being introduced to the growing U.S. cycling masses, Faliero returned to Italy upon becoming disenchanted with the American lifestyle. He ran most business operations from Italy while production continued in California.

Before long Faliero stopped visiting the U.S. facility and retired from the business, shuttering his shop in Milan. Faced with the prospect of ending his family legacy, Alberto decided to reinvigorate the Masi brand and reopened its legendary space beneath the Vigorelli.

Alberto’s philosophy of producing fewer than 800 handmade frames per year contrasted sharply with the mass production ambitions his American backers had in mind. This led to a well publicized and heated breakup between Italian and American counterparts, and the Masi family quickly found themselves unable to continue selling bikes by their own name in the United States.

After Faliero’s retirement and rift within the company in the late 1970s, Alberto introduced the Prestige model as a modernized version of the Gran Criterium. While featuring a more elegant and refined design with micro-fusion cast lugs, it was never legally imported to the United States.

Because California Masi owned the distribution rights to the Masi name, Alberto was unable to put the Prestige in the hands of American buyers. For that reason Prestige framesets are very desirable in the U.S. market.

The Ultimate Contribution

By 1980 many thought the “golden era” was over for Masi. In perhaps the most significant contribution to modern framebuilding however, Alberto introduced the 3V Volumetrica in 1981. The Volumetrica was the first frame to feature internal lugs and oversize tubing on a steel frame.

So transcending a design was it that Masi started producing custom frames for modern champions like Claudio Chiappucci, Miguel Indurain, and Greg LeMond. The Volumetrica was and still is one of the most nimble and stiff bikes ever made. Much like the fabled Mercedes 300SL Gullwing, the Masi 3V Volumetrica was 20 years ahead of its time in design and execution.

Although revolutionary, the Volumetrica was a distant cousin from the forgiving Cadillac-like ride delivered by the Special and Gran Criterium models. The Volumetrica was a no nonsense, stiff-as-triple-starched-dress-shirt ride that delivered razor sharp performance.

If teeth chattering in the back of one’s head on poorly paved roads was a tolerable thing, the Volumetrica was your fastest choice. The Classic Rendezvous site has a great Bicycle Guide road test of the Volumetrica from the late 1980s.

Nearly 25 years after its introduction, the 3V Volumetrica is still offered by Alberto, although in the United States it is released bearing the Milano3V name badge, commemorating the city in which Cicli Masi originated. The Volumetrica started strictly as steel, but as frame material options have grown, Masi now offers the Milano3V in steel, aluminum, and even carbon.

Masi frames now sold in the United States are no longer from the hands of the Cicli Masi shop beneath the Vigorelli velodrome. Still headquartered outside San Diego, Masi America has grown into a mature company taking full advantage of mass-produced assembly line manufacturing practices.

The pressures of a global economy have forced Masi America into a company far different from the days of Faliero. Masi bikes are still the ultimate in high technology and advanced design but the mystique of a modern American Masi remains a far cry from that conjured by The Tailor and his apprentices.

10 comments to The Mystique of Masi: From Vigorelli to Volumetrica

  • I really enjoyed reading your Masi page. If you don’t mind, I have a few additions and corrections that you or whoever wrote the article might find helpful.

    1: Faliero Masi spent a few years working at Gloria just before WWII.

    2: “Masi brought his enterprise to the United States to take advantage of the blossoming interest in American cycling. Faliero’s son, Alberto, and his frame building master apprentice, the legendary Mario Confente, also came along to help grow the business.”

    Alberto remained in Italy. Faliero, Mario (who was technically not an apprentice, he was a Masi subcontractor who had his own shop and several employees of his own in Verona), and Roberto were the ones who came to the US.

    3: “Alberto Masi also built Gran Criterium frames in Milan during the late 1970s”

    Technically true, but for all practical purposes the Italian Gran Criterium was pretty much gone by the mid ’70′s, replaced by the Prestige.

    4: “Greg Fletcher’s Masi Site hosts a wealth of information on identifying and dating California Masis as provided by Brian Baylis, (snipped)”

    Greg’s got a wonderful site but the material on dating US Masis is a bit fragmented. For a more complete overview of California Masi serial numbers, please take a look at my article (and feel free to link to it if you like).

    This article is continually updated and supplemented while the Masi Lore information is composed mostly of quotes from the Classic Rendezvous mailing list (and as such has a few holes here and there).

    4: “The greatest number of Gran Criteriums were built at the Carlsbad facility in the 70’s, with Breaking Away helping propel the model to become Masi’s most popular ever.”

    This quote is a bit misleading because the Carlsbad facility had been closed for several years when Breaking Away came out. David Stoller’s (misspelled “Stohler” in your article) Masi may have been built by Rob Roberson at Rancho Santa Fe. Other possible builders would be Keith Lippy or Ted Kirkbride.

    5: “While Masi was being introduced to the growing U.S. cycling masses, Faliero returned to Italy upon becoming disenchanted with the American lifestyle. He ran most business operations from Italy while production continued in California. Before long Faliero stopped visiting the U.S. facility and retired from the business, shuttering his shop in Milan. Faced with the prospect of ending his family legacy, Alberto decided to reinvigorate the Masi brand and reopened its legendary space beneath the Vigorelli.”

    I have not seen any evidence that Faliero had very much to do with California business operations after returning to Italy.

    Alberto took over the Vigorelli operation and was producing bikes in Italy, probably from the moment Faliero stepped on the plane to the US. Also, I would be very interested to know the source of the statement that Masi ever closed its doors. One article states that they “considered” closing the shop, but there’s no indication that it ever happened… I have a collection of photos of several hundred Italian Masi frames with nearly continuous date codes from the early 70′s thru the late 80′s.

    6: “in the late 1970s, Alberto introduced the Prestige model as a modernized version of the Gran Criterium. While featuring a more elegant and refined design with micro-fusion cast lugs, it was never legally imported to the United States.”

    The Prestige was introduced in early 1975. Investment cast lugs appeared on American Masis at nearly the same time as their appearance on Alberto’s bikes. Note that most collectors would take exception to the comment that the cookie-cutter IC lugs were more “elegant and refined” than the older hand-filed pressed lugs. “Lifeless and sterile” might be a more common description of the newer lugs.

    Prestiges were imported legally in small numbers by special order thru Masi Worldwide/High Country imports. I have photocopies of several order forms and price quotes signed by Alberto.

    7: “Nearly 25 years after its introduction, the 3V Volumetrica is still offered by Alberto, although in the United States it is released bearing the Milano3V name badge”

    You might want to add that early on Alberto’s 3V was indeed imported into the US thru Masi Worldwide in 1984-1987 (as bonafide 3V’s, not under the Milano name). Then, from 1988 on, Joe Starck built American 3V’s in San Marcos. These are distinguished from Italian 3V’s by different decals and the use of a different fork crown and dropouts. Another (cheaper) variant, the Team 3V, was later built for Masi USA under subcontract by Mondonico. Small numbers of US 3V’s continued to be built by Ted Kirkbride in the ’90′s, and Ted says they are still available today.

    8: “Masi frames now sold in the United States are no longer from the hands of the Cicli Masi shop beneath the Vigorelli velodrome.”

    Unfortunately, neither are Italian Masis. Alberto’s “retro” steel bike (the Nuovo Prstige) is built by a subcontractor, and the rest of the Masi line is almost certainly subcontracted as well. Anyone who visits the Vigorellli today will probably see a few bikes being assembled or repaired, that’s about it.

    I would like you and your readers to be aware that there is a Registry for US and Italian Masis… if anyone wishes to have their Special, GC, Prestige, 3V or Pista listed, they are welcome to contact me and I’ll be happy to add it (note that the Registries are limited to lugged steel Masis only).

    Italian Masi Registry
    American Masi Registry

    Best wishes,
    Bob Hovey

  • Jon Metcalf

    I still have the bike I used to race on. It’s a yellow Masi Gran Criterium which I purchased in the fall of 1974 from a bike shop in Salt Lake City called Pro cyclery. The serial number 432 MC 62. If anyone has any info you could share, I’d like to hear from you. Jon Metcalf – jonrmetcalf@hotmail.com Thank you,…

  • Larry Baitch

    More Masi lore..

    Eddie Weissler, a frame builder and owner of Cyclery North in Chicago in the 70′s & 80′s, claims to have built the Masi that was featured in the TV Series “Breaking Away” with Shawn Cassidy playing the role of Dave.

    Eddie stated that Masi would not allow their actual frames to be shown on television, due to the proprietary nature of their frame angles.

  • Ken Huttunen

    I have a white 3V ,no. M58,9095 ,trying to establish year and location of manufact ure. Any help would be appreciated,thanks,Ken

  • Diane Moser

    My father worked for Masi in Rancho Santa Fe, CA in the 70′s. He assembled the bikes before they went to the dealers. I was a young child at the time but distinctly remember the beautiful bicycles. My father passed away a few years ago, so now I am unable to talk to him about Masi. His name was Rene’ Moser. He was from Switzerland and had a true appreciation for the art of the Masi bicycles. I find the history fascinating, thank you!

  • Hi! I was surfing and found your blog post… nice! I love your blog. :) Cheers! Sandra. R.

  • Scott

    Diane,I met your dad at one of the Bike shows , maybe Long beach in 1986 and he was such a nice man.He had a real passion for Masi!

  • Found this 1971(best guess) Masi Gran Criterium built in Verona Italy (V53) a week ago and have been riding it since. What a wonderful bicycle and I cannot wait to fully restore the bike, assuming that I choose to keep it(size is an issue and the bike might be a tad small).

  • Marcie Bodeaux

    Hello,
    I am looking at a Masi Gran Corsa, 1987. Can you tell me where it was built, who was the builder and what the value might be? It was originally purchased in the Bay Area of California as a frame set. The components are from an early 80′s Bianchi with a mix of Campy NR and Chorus:
    Handle bar says Bianchi

    Stem says custom

    Seat stem 3TTT

    Headset is Campy

    Front derailleur is Campy

    Rear derailleur is Campy Nouvo Record

    Chorus brakes

    Wheels hubs are Gipiemme
    Thank you.

  • Flavio Piazza

    Hello everybody!
    Finally i found your nice MASI blog for enthusiasts…
    I got a MASI Prestige from January 1980 with complete Campagnolo Super Record from 1979
    Brown Colour with Yellow Decals and painted Yello Campagnolo Parts…
    Sadly the Frame messure is 53 cm (Seat Tube) and it’s too small for me…
    Nearly perfect conditions…a few scratches on the top tube and without pedals…
    Even the Saddle (Turbo, Bernard Hinault) and the golden Bar Tape is original…
    Anybody interested to buy my bike?
    For Pictures contact me…
    flavio.piazza@gmx.ch

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