one-eyed_jim
Old School Grand Master
Do you know what such a figure might be? The British MTB market was still very much in its infancy in 1984, and dominated by small manufacturers and a few expensive imports. It's not hard for me to believe that Saracen might have been the market leader at that time, and of course such claims are hard to disprove, but how many sales would that have taken?GrahamJohnWallace":2dnrcs3w said:By mid 1984 Blumels were claiming in their Saracen adverts that they were "the best selling mountain bikes in Britain". By December they were also claiming that they made "The only British-made mountain bike to be sold in the USA and Canada". It is sadly unlikely that a hand built framebuilder like Bob Jackson could have produced this level of output.
As for the export line, that could also be a matter of one or two US dealers. Certainly, Mercian were big enough to have US dealers in the seventies and eighties, and Jackson isn't a smaller outfit.
I'm not disputing that some - or even most - Mavericks were imported, but my father's 531 model is certainly British made, and almost certainly as early as the identically-equipped Japanese example in the 1985 review you posted. As far as I can see, there isn't any evidence that the RSP Mavericks came any later than the Japanese imports.As for the Raleigh Maverick, I have recieved information from a collector who specialises in early British mountain bikes, that he has an early Maverick that is labelled as "Made in Japan".
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The Raleigh "Special Products Division" at Ilkeston, produced hand built mountain bikes from at least August 1985 when they puplisised the "Midnight Express" made by Gerald O'Donovan for Tim Gartside. They made bikes for a variety of uses. Some later examples may well have been branded as Mavericks.