Sure, Apps was on a different page entirely. But he wasn’t exactly setting the world alight with his designs. Maybe he did a bit for the tweed industry in Cumbria or wherever but I cannot see anything he did for mountain biking as it became today. I don’t think that Mr Shimano ever visited Geoff’s shed to talk about developing a whole new group set for the Pathfinder. Totally different beasts, but when talking about mountain bikes, we are specifically looking back to and then on a timeline from the Repack gang. There’s simply nothing that connects Apps to the world we now live in. Sure, maybe he hit upon the 650B/700C knobbliest before the Yanks would have, but at the rate they were developing stuff, I believe it would’ve made no difference whatsoever had Geoff Apps never existed. And then, perhaps THE most important link from Ritchey/Kelly/Fisher/Specialized to the explosion of companies that grew up in the states (the east coast was also rapidly growing from the early 80s as well as the main hub of the west coast manufacturers) is the WTB gang and specifically Charlie Cunningham with his inventions and developments, then Steve Potts and Mark Slate ramping it all up and the synergies between them, what Specialized was doing in the Far East, and Suntour’s and Shimano’s involvement in the whole lot. Certainly no Apps involvement or dare I say even influence there.
Apps has his place in bicycling history, I don’t dispute or deny him that, but it should not be confused with what mountain biking was then or is today. Then take it back to the whole purpose of this thread, and tell me whether the core f British mountain bike builders that had super success - Muddy Fox, Saracen, Orange, Pace (I’d even omit Raleigh from the list because that was a behemoth of a bicycle company just capitalising on the whole explosion of interest in it but aside from the race team and DynaTech/RSP they didn’t really push anything along in the development of the mountain bike industry, they just added to the numbers and from their half-arsed approach and subsequent failings simply helped the likes of Hope, Pace, X-Lite, Mr Crud and some others really explode within the burgeoning British ‘mountain bike’ scene by the sheer numbers of low end bikes sold that for kids - like me - on one in the early days but then quickly onto better stuff. The Brits pretty much jumped on the American-and-Japanese bandwagon and made a huge success off the back of their inventions and the industrial and mass manufacturing expertise.
legrandefromage":13v76gim said:
And any modern MTB of any kind will get thoroughly bollocked in this:
You cannot know that for sure. But I reckon plenty of contemporary bike designs would easily nogiated that, and get back down again quickly and with control. A 29er+ hardtail could eat that up.