Thing is, I quite miss those days of traditional values, failure to innovate, and being told what's good for us.superstar1":3onrygn7 said:This thread reminds me of the 1980's when I had read a magazine article about these new fangled mountain bikes that had taken off in the US. So I went to my all singing all dancing Raleigh dealer and talked to a very nice chap in a natty blue overall complete with Raleigh logo and explained what I was looking for.
"No, that's just an American fad and they will never catch on, now what about this nice sturmy archer three speed, great for canal banking", said the very nice chap.
Is it any wonder they went out of business, just like the British motor and motorcycling industry, a failure to innovate.
I've great memories of growing up with a big, Raleigh bike shoppe nearby. Yes, when that crazy mountain bike thing hit, they looked a bit stuffy and not trendy, but all the same, there was a certain something about it all.
There's more than just nostalgia that makes my golden era of mountain biking to be from the late 80s to early 90s. Whilst a couple of my bikes are 95, and comprehensively better than my bikes from the early 90s, I think I still prefer the slightly earlier era.
For a couple of sports that I actually participate in, they were at there best before they hit their peak. Diversification and becoming overly popular - to me at least - was kind of the start of their downfall. They all seemed to follow the same boom and bust pattern.