ishay":euwi5e9l said:
Having faithfully restored 3 early 90s bikes last year I slightly backed off interest when I started riding more again and accepted that they really didn’t ride that great if I was honest.
This month though I completed more of a semi-rat build and decided to test a more modern cockpit. 70mm 35deg stem and 700mm high rise bars.
It has completely brought the bike to life. I will now happily ride this bike on almost anything that isn’t really gnarly.
Anybody else made this one change and loved it?
Short answer is yes. Flat bars and low rise stems were all the rage back then but also I was much younger so I could take the pressure.
My Kona had its tame riser bars switched out for some eastons and my wifes RM had its zoom flats swapped for the same. Wide and with quite a rise on them. I'm in the middle of revamping the rocky mountain with vbrakes (from DX canti's) and riser bars. We both love the bike, but as we get older, it needs some further comfort and utility. Some retro purists may scoff at that, but were they not made more hospitable to older riders who appreciate them, a lot of these older frames may well have been consigned to the dump.
In my view, to run a true period correct retro bike takes something inside you, as in you really want to tick that box that you couldn't tick in your youth for whatever reason. It's an itch we have to scratch. It's similar to owning a vintage car, you put up with the lack of power steering and electric windows because you love it for what it is.
I guess for wifey and I, our bodies decided at some point recently that we were no longer young.
I also keep in mind that mountain biking was considered an extreme sport back when all this kit was devised and comfort was not even a secondary concern. It was all weight, looks and performance.
The really cool thing, which you yourself have noticed, is that older frames still have much to offer in terms of performance. There is no doubt at all, I'd buy an older steel frame over almost anything modern, simply because they were far better made and will cope with pretty much anything. Modern stuff is mostly built down to a price and that is reflected in the ride as it would be.