walleater
Retro Guru
Re: Re:
And yet funnily enough, the modern 'enduro' type mountain bikes share much more resemblance in terms of design to the klunker type bikes. Slack geometry, short stems, wide bars, wide rims....the list goes on. The NORBA style bike proved to be an evolutionary dead end unless you like riding around fields or fireroads.
Anyway, here's my old Specialized M2 Team Edition with Bontrager Competition fork. The frame lasted around 2 months
RichieB":152a2deu said:It's an undisputable fact the American companies and builders led in the development of the technology and sport that we call mountain biking - it took Europe at least a decade to decide that MTB/vtt/atb'so weren't just a fad, which allowed North Anerican builders to start producing viable bikes, and push design parameters much earlier.
Given that, there are simply more iconic, significant US-based bikes that date back further than the Euro bikes.
We can't rewrite the history - but we can acknowledge the roles that each company and country played in the development of mountain biking into a Global Sport. We just can get mad that the Americans led the way. It's favt-based history.
And yet funnily enough, the modern 'enduro' type mountain bikes share much more resemblance in terms of design to the klunker type bikes. Slack geometry, short stems, wide bars, wide rims....the list goes on. The NORBA style bike proved to be an evolutionary dead end unless you like riding around fields or fireroads.
Anyway, here's my old Specialized M2 Team Edition with Bontrager Competition fork. The frame lasted around 2 months