Re: rear triangle strength. The Battle has a very strong rear end on it with large overlay at the Horst link for lateral stiffness. The original BB pivot lasted 3 years, a nylon sleeve with threaded centring spacers. Then I fashioned 2 brass oil-impregnated bushings which lasted 2 more years. Lastly, I drilled out the through-hole to receive a stock car suspension bushing made by a custom car builder buddy of mine. This was so strong that it put all the torsional force rearward and ate the original Horst bushings almost immediately, which is the next modification on the schedule. The rear triangle is square carbon tubing bonded onto aluminum lugs. Honestly, these look like they were sourced from the same place that makes (made at the time) carbon fibre hockey stick shafts. A crude(ish) but wise and cost effective approach to a tricky problem: strength and light weight. They are the exact dimensions of a hockey stick, so I assume that's what they are. Buy 2 hockey stick shafts and you've got a rear triangle! Nice. Good for winter riding too...the rear derailleur cable uses a casing hidden in the seat stay runnng from the stopper located in the top tube shock mount, an nice touch that always kept it free of contamination for 3 years or more at a time.
On another point, am I recalling this incorrectly (?) or did I see a Herbold Miyata, very much a 10000, but with just a small bumper or cushion device inserted where the seat stays usually would bolt on as a type of limited travel system, like 1 or 1.5 inches travel. Was this actually a bike, or is my memory of 14 years ago just a bit wrong now? I think it was real, because I remember thinking, "Hey, can I make that gig for my own bike without wrecking it?" I wouldn't have thought that if it required a top tube shock mount, but I am almost sure I remember a Miyata at Ste. Anne with this small elastomer thing going on. Maybe it was an XC bike. Do you know about this at all or I am I getting my first memory failures?(!). Thanks