masha
Kona Fan
IMHO - an anyone spot the correlation here:
Muddy Fox
Ridgeback
Saracen
Barracuda
Back in the early days (and possibly as late as 1995), most of these brands were well respected in their field. I think I would summarise by saying they 'sold their soul' - or brand names, and production techniques had a drastic change in direction.
Muddy Fox has to be a good example of how the mighty have fallen: - late '80s in the UK I would have sold a private part to obtain one. Today, the name still exists but is sold through the Sports Direct stores, and, lets just say.... they don't make 'em like they used to (and are simply trading on a name that more people associate with being 'budget' these days). However, some would argue the mighty have gone "strength to strength" and today make more units and profit through volume sales than was imaginable in the '80s.
Then there is the mid'90s US mighty conglomerate that saw the likes of Trek, Fisher, Klein etc 'join forces' I won't quite label all of these with the same level of kudos demise as the above, but I think its fair to say things were never quite the same (and you've only got to compare the value and desirability today of a "pre-Trek" Klein to see what followed).
It happened with 'trick bits' too - can anyone recall just how cool certain component manufacturers were (eg Curve and White Industries) in the early days before similarly selling their designs to the big bicycle manufacturers to mass produce in the far east.
That's globalisation for you, and I find it interesting how US, GB, Europe came up with most of the early design and build, and then the Japanese started making it all, then the Taiwanese, then the Malaysian's and finally the Chinese. These days anything MTB marked 'made in Japan' is starting to look quite appealing quality-wise, whereas 10 years ago I wanted as much of my bike as possible to made in the UK or US.
After watching Klunkers DVD this year, I'm fascinated by the early Ritchey, Fisher, Breezer bikes, and then the 1981 Specialized stump-jumper that paved the way to far-eastern mass production of what was still a good quality bike: - but made in the sort of numbers to make available to the masses worldwide.
Its amazing how the Mountain bike changed the dynamic of the cycle industry forever over a fairly short time period.
Discuss and can anyone else think of any great brands that are not what they used to be (although I appreciate some may not like to say for fear of upsetting later retro-bikers, or even upsetting the manufacturer's (but then its all just personal opinion and an observation of 30 years of messing about with bikes). It would be great if certain brands could make a come back as quality products again, but I appreciate those days are probably gone as its not practical or economically viable to do things how they used to - its a shame though, but then that's what makes retro-bikes Grrrrrrrrrreat!
Happy Klunkering
Muddy Fox
Ridgeback
Saracen
Barracuda
Back in the early days (and possibly as late as 1995), most of these brands were well respected in their field. I think I would summarise by saying they 'sold their soul' - or brand names, and production techniques had a drastic change in direction.
Muddy Fox has to be a good example of how the mighty have fallen: - late '80s in the UK I would have sold a private part to obtain one. Today, the name still exists but is sold through the Sports Direct stores, and, lets just say.... they don't make 'em like they used to (and are simply trading on a name that more people associate with being 'budget' these days). However, some would argue the mighty have gone "strength to strength" and today make more units and profit through volume sales than was imaginable in the '80s.
Then there is the mid'90s US mighty conglomerate that saw the likes of Trek, Fisher, Klein etc 'join forces' I won't quite label all of these with the same level of kudos demise as the above, but I think its fair to say things were never quite the same (and you've only got to compare the value and desirability today of a "pre-Trek" Klein to see what followed).
It happened with 'trick bits' too - can anyone recall just how cool certain component manufacturers were (eg Curve and White Industries) in the early days before similarly selling their designs to the big bicycle manufacturers to mass produce in the far east.
That's globalisation for you, and I find it interesting how US, GB, Europe came up with most of the early design and build, and then the Japanese started making it all, then the Taiwanese, then the Malaysian's and finally the Chinese. These days anything MTB marked 'made in Japan' is starting to look quite appealing quality-wise, whereas 10 years ago I wanted as much of my bike as possible to made in the UK or US.
After watching Klunkers DVD this year, I'm fascinated by the early Ritchey, Fisher, Breezer bikes, and then the 1981 Specialized stump-jumper that paved the way to far-eastern mass production of what was still a good quality bike: - but made in the sort of numbers to make available to the masses worldwide.
Its amazing how the Mountain bike changed the dynamic of the cycle industry forever over a fairly short time period.
Discuss and can anyone else think of any great brands that are not what they used to be (although I appreciate some may not like to say for fear of upsetting later retro-bikers, or even upsetting the manufacturer's (but then its all just personal opinion and an observation of 30 years of messing about with bikes). It would be great if certain brands could make a come back as quality products again, but I appreciate those days are probably gone as its not practical or economically viable to do things how they used to - its a shame though, but then that's what makes retro-bikes Grrrrrrrrrreat!
Happy Klunkering