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I too have a certain degree of nostalgia for the long slack geometry of the early mountain bikes. However that was a geometry copied from the 1930's fat tyred post-boy bikes that the US MTB pioneers used to make their 'clunkers'. It was not arrived at as a result of science, experimentation or testing. It was the geometry that the pioneers were used to riding and happy with and probably came from the 1930's road motorcycles that the original post-boy bikes were intended to emulate.FluffyChicken":3hlfbyhg said:So what you are saying is, they are moving back to retro seat angles and retro inline posts? (of course back then it varied with frame size, at least on decent bikes).
(for example my 92/3 ish Rockies).
Nowt wrong with that, good to see they've seen the light.
Joe Breeze, Charlie Cunningham, Tom Ritchey and others, did however play around with handlebar and stem designs. This was probably influenced by their road riding backgrounds and the more forward riding positions they were used to.