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Yes. In 1981 Gary Fisher and Charlie Kelly displayed one of their first Ritchey framed production prototypes at the Long Beach cycle show attracting a great deal of interest from Japanese bicycle manufacturers. "The Japanese liked what they saw, measured up, and went home and cloned mountain bikes".
Unlike Repack, this happening is not part of the mythology of mountain bikes. However, it kickstarted mountain-bike production and the commercialisation of the mountain-bike.
The first advert/article for the MountainBikes company was in BMX Plus magazine in 1980. This magazine was also read in the UK. So reading this and similar articles, Knowledge of the existence of the US Mountain bikes quickly spread to the UK.
Interestingly the earliest record of a US style mountain-bike being displayed at UK bicycle show was also in 1981 at York. The bike was made by an nuclear physicist and amateur frame-builder called Tony Oliver.
If the Japanese bike industry had attended York, instead of Long Beach that year, they might have thought that the design originated here. Tony Oliver describes the reaction of the UK cycle trade to this lone mountain as "incredulous". Unfortunately, UK manufacturers, though world leaders in bicycle manufacture at that time, did not receive the mountain-bike concept with the same enthusiasm as the Japanese.
So in 1981, there began a rush to develop mountain-bikes and bring them to market. Raleigh management, decided that mountain-bikes would be a short term fad, and so decided not to produce them. This left the UK market wide open for smaller manufacturers like Dawes & Saracen, and importers like Ridgeback and Muddy Fox.
Unlike Repack, this happening is not part of the mythology of mountain bikes. However, it kickstarted mountain-bike production and the commercialisation of the mountain-bike.
The first advert/article for the MountainBikes company was in BMX Plus magazine in 1980. This magazine was also read in the UK. So reading this and similar articles, Knowledge of the existence of the US Mountain bikes quickly spread to the UK.
Interestingly the earliest record of a US style mountain-bike being displayed at UK bicycle show was also in 1981 at York. The bike was made by an nuclear physicist and amateur frame-builder called Tony Oliver.
If the Japanese bike industry had attended York, instead of Long Beach that year, they might have thought that the design originated here. Tony Oliver describes the reaction of the UK cycle trade to this lone mountain as "incredulous". Unfortunately, UK manufacturers, though world leaders in bicycle manufacture at that time, did not receive the mountain-bike concept with the same enthusiasm as the Japanese.
So in 1981, there began a rush to develop mountain-bikes and bring them to market. Raleigh management, decided that mountain-bikes would be a short term fad, and so decided not to produce them. This left the UK market wide open for smaller manufacturers like Dawes & Saracen, and importers like Ridgeback and Muddy Fox.
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