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As before, there is a very early MBK on the site somewhere along with the obvious Stumpjumpers and Ritch-Tea biscuits plus plenty of imports baring UK brand names.
The Saracen/ Evans prototypes that surfaced a few years ago should be held up as the 'earliest UK' MTB unless some other prototype pops up and shows itself.
As written many pages ago, the Apps thing was always to be treated as a separate timeline but as it turns out it does play a part in the whole - especially if you go back to that 'Man v Horse' event which saw a few well known international names mixing it up and then riders/ builders/ engineers chatting in the Surrey mud.
I love the fact that this stirs up a few of the frothy mouthed as its just not what happened in their fuzzy memories or allowed in their equally narrow worlds.
The mid 1980's is the nebulous hazy cloud that gave us the MTB as we know it, in fact what this site seems to coalesce around - RetroSpuds' beloved 'nimble race machine'. Not the rapidly out of date Rangers, 'traditional' looking Evans, Stumpjumpers etc etc.
New XC bikes burst out into the frenzy that was the late 1980's fluorescent MTB scene imprinting impressionable young minds with the burning after image of an Alpine Stars paint job or a fluoro Marin or the ubiquitous Fat Willy's Surf Shack sticker.
I could argue that danson67s' February 1986 Overbury's Pioneer is the 'oldest mountain bike' in the UK (its build number 3 so there are two others out there, maybe) as the others were copies of copies. His Pioneer was one of the first to eschew the fat tyred road/cyclocross Ritchey look and go all out for custom designed fast cross country bike with technical ability - but that would be far too controversial and should be put down to my recent head injury...
Maybe.
(here's a Pioneer from 1985! viewtopic.php?f=1&t=108361&p=2886122&hilit=pioneer#p2885710)
The Saracen/ Evans prototypes that surfaced a few years ago should be held up as the 'earliest UK' MTB unless some other prototype pops up and shows itself.
As written many pages ago, the Apps thing was always to be treated as a separate timeline but as it turns out it does play a part in the whole - especially if you go back to that 'Man v Horse' event which saw a few well known international names mixing it up and then riders/ builders/ engineers chatting in the Surrey mud.
I love the fact that this stirs up a few of the frothy mouthed as its just not what happened in their fuzzy memories or allowed in their equally narrow worlds.
The mid 1980's is the nebulous hazy cloud that gave us the MTB as we know it, in fact what this site seems to coalesce around - RetroSpuds' beloved 'nimble race machine'. Not the rapidly out of date Rangers, 'traditional' looking Evans, Stumpjumpers etc etc.
New XC bikes burst out into the frenzy that was the late 1980's fluorescent MTB scene imprinting impressionable young minds with the burning after image of an Alpine Stars paint job or a fluoro Marin or the ubiquitous Fat Willy's Surf Shack sticker.
I could argue that danson67s' February 1986 Overbury's Pioneer is the 'oldest mountain bike' in the UK (its build number 3 so there are two others out there, maybe) as the others were copies of copies. His Pioneer was one of the first to eschew the fat tyred road/cyclocross Ritchey look and go all out for custom designed fast cross country bike with technical ability - but that would be far too controversial and should be put down to my recent head injury...
Maybe.
(here's a Pioneer from 1985! viewtopic.php?f=1&t=108361&p=2886122&hilit=pioneer#p2885710)