Hattyfatner
Dirt Disciple
I thought Giant were to blame for 'ATB' as they thought 'MTB' was subject to copyright.
FluffyChicken":v1yhsc6y said:No they've not. Proof is this post.Ride604":v1yhsc6y said:OMG!!! MTB is what mountain bikes are called in American English, and ATB is what mountain bikes are called in UK English. They are, and always have been, the exact same bikes!!!!! LMFAO!!!
We had MTB and ATB and BSO over here.
Though ignore my post above of course ;-)
danson67":1fu9qq3t said:There's also the persistence of ATB driven by the direct translation of the French VTT (velo tout terrain).
I don't remember the French ever using "velo de montagne", velo montagnard" or " Le mountainbike" or such, even today.
All the best,
All the best,I remember when other bike companies belatedly entered the market (Dawes and Raleigh spring to mind but there were others) and they marketed their bikes as ATBs. I was dead against this for primarily two reasons...
1. I thought 'Mountain Bikes' or 'MTBs' had a kudos that 'All Terrain Bikes' or 'ATBs' would never have. (Even though it was a pretty accurate description). Of course we were still trying to overcome the resistance from bike shops - "There are no mountains round here mate!"....('mate' wasn't the word they actually used.).
2. We had, from the start, marketed ourselves as "Muddy Fox - The Mountain Bike People" There was a danger that if the term ''ATB' became the accepted term we'd be the market leaders of a dead term. At that time we were advertising pretty heavily in the bike press and garnering an extraordinary amount of coverage in all kinds of national press, magazines and TV. The bike press were however wavering as to which term to adopt as the norm. I stamped my feet and threw tantrums with the bike press until 'Mountain Bikes' won the day.
Not my proudest moment but no regrets
firedfromthecircus":1co2dw0v said:There was a question mark over whether Mountain Bike (MTB) was a trademark in the early days. So to avoid the issue entirely some companies called their early bikes ATBs. Once it was realised that MTB was not a trademark ATB was quietly dropped. I read that in an old book sometime. ;-)
danson67":lmubu73a said:Interesting info from Drew Lawson of Muddy Fox on Facebook yesterday:
All the best,I remember when other bike companies belatedly entered the market (Dawes and Raleigh spring to mind but there were others) and they marketed their bikes as ATBs. I was dead against this for primarily two reasons...
1. I thought 'Mountain Bikes' or 'MTBs' had a kudos that 'All Terrain Bikes' or 'ATBs' would never have. (Even though it was a pretty accurate description). Of course we were still trying to overcome the resistance from bike shops - "There are no mountains round here mate!"....('mate' wasn't the word they actually used.).
2. We had, from the start, marketed ourselves as "Muddy Fox - The Mountain Bike People" There was a danger that if the term ''ATB' became the accepted term we'd be the market leaders of a dead term. At that time we were advertising pretty heavily in the bike press and garnering an extraordinary amount of coverage in all kinds of national press, magazines and TV. The bike press were however wavering as to which term to adopt as the norm. I stamped my feet and threw tantrums with the bike press until 'Mountain Bikes' won the day.
Not my proudest moment but no regrets