ChrisBrown81
Retro Guru
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I came accross this on the net and thought it something the peeps on here would like. Some of you may have seen it before, sorry if you have....
A chap in the states came accross this for $300. After it arrived it was clear it had been stolen at some point...All the pant had been stripped and every sticker removed. The brakes were like something he'd never seen before either..
After doing some investigating it turned out to be an American team GT riders bike that had been stolen. The brakes were prototype cable drum brakes from Shimano (which cost a cool $10,000 a set to produce and never made it to full production)
As you can see the frame doesn't have the curved seat tube like the finished Alu Lobo. The reason they ended up 'curving' the seat tube is that they couldn't get the shock far enough forward to not rub the tyre when at the end of its travel (a problem also found on the carbon version).
The boxxers are also pre-production versions with the bolt on brace.
The back end features box section chain-stays...the ones found on the carbon lobo (very similar to LTS's) were found to be prone to snaping because of the stress of the low down shock (compared to the LTS). This box section found its way on to the finished Alu Lobo. The one piece plates that connect the trunion to the frame and back end were also upgraded to much 'beefier' 2 piece versions. This was to make trunion adjustment much easier as you didn't have to take apart so much of the back end.
The chap who bought this contacted GT about the bike. GT very kindly gave him a brand new bike (some 10 years after the Lobo was made!) so that this could go into their museum at GT HQ.
I thought it was interesting, hope you did too!
A chap in the states came accross this for $300. After it arrived it was clear it had been stolen at some point...All the pant had been stripped and every sticker removed. The brakes were like something he'd never seen before either..
After doing some investigating it turned out to be an American team GT riders bike that had been stolen. The brakes were prototype cable drum brakes from Shimano (which cost a cool $10,000 a set to produce and never made it to full production)
As you can see the frame doesn't have the curved seat tube like the finished Alu Lobo. The reason they ended up 'curving' the seat tube is that they couldn't get the shock far enough forward to not rub the tyre when at the end of its travel (a problem also found on the carbon version).
The boxxers are also pre-production versions with the bolt on brace.
The back end features box section chain-stays...the ones found on the carbon lobo (very similar to LTS's) were found to be prone to snaping because of the stress of the low down shock (compared to the LTS). This box section found its way on to the finished Alu Lobo. The one piece plates that connect the trunion to the frame and back end were also upgraded to much 'beefier' 2 piece versions. This was to make trunion adjustment much easier as you didn't have to take apart so much of the back end.
The chap who bought this contacted GT about the bike. GT very kindly gave him a brand new bike (some 10 years after the Lobo was made!) so that this could go into their museum at GT HQ.
I thought it was interesting, hope you did too!