danson67":2p09qviz said:
Hi Paul,
Welcome to the group...and that's a great bike to drop.
Thanks for the welcome. Yes, I knew very well the history of the Pioneer, having been in and out of the shop many many times over the previous couple of years. I had some other mountain bike before the Pioneer - don't recall what it was, but nothing particularly remarkable. When Andy came up with the Pioneer, I knew it was the bike I wanted.
Does anyone know what happened to Andy? I've scoured the internet and established that the shop closed, but I never found a hint of what he did instead.
My own Overbury's story, which I've repeated to way more US bike shops than ever wanted to hear it, is about the way that Specialized and Shimano teamed up to more or less destroy them. In 1985/1986, if you went to any mountain bike race in the UK, everybody who was anybody was on an Overburys (and frequently a Pioneer). This included ex motorcross people, the newly arrived bike messengers turned racers and the few roadies who were trying out off road. But all those Overburys machines needed Shimano parts, and so (according to Andy), Specialized leaned on Shimano to slow down the parts supply to a crawl. Andy ended up with a warehouse space hold more than hundreds of thousands pounds worth of unfinished bikes, waiting for parts. They did eventually show up of course, but the result of the 6-12 month period where this took place was that word got out that despite Overburys having the best UK mountain bike (by far, for racing anyway), they were slow and it would take months to get a bike from them.
Not uncoincidentally, it was precisely this period that saw Specialized grow in significance in the UK MB scene, and they were soon the most common brand that you'd see racers on.
The bike served me well even though I had stopped mountain bike racing by 1986 or so. I took it to Germany to start a Ph.D near Heidelberg, and wowed a young guy called German who had just opened a mountain bike shop there (he is still open, and remarkably has essentially zero internet presence). Riding the Pioneer in the Odenwald was a true joy, and the 1000' hill climb into work every day up the Konigstuhl got me into even better shape. Then I rode it down the US west coast, where it performed wonderfully as a touring machine - climbing on that bike was as good as any other bike I've ever owned. It remained my primary bike for 7 years of commuting to work in Seattle, but in the meantime I got into ultramarathon cycling. By 1999 I had moved back to the east coast, and splurged on a custom Spectrum Ti road frame, which was a revelation. And in the meantime, I'd also ridden Amsterdam->Athens with my first wife on a Counterpoint Opus IV semi-recumbent tandem. In the 2000's I got into triathlon with my second wife, and have been on a carbon Aegis for a while, but racing triathlons is also over for me now. The Surly Straggler is the start of a new era for me, just sad it weighs more than the Pioneer!
I hope to have another Overburys to show everyone next week ... if you read carefully, you can already guess which one