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It was red, specilaized, £1095 and on the second floor at Grafham Cycling
It had Suntour forks with steel stanchions.
There was too much pressed steel for the price.
Personally I think there's a lot of good value out there if you rootle around but there's a shite load of overpriced chuff too. But as already said, it's gone too far from the simple engineering form a bike takes.
Go 'retro' (in reality, secondhand) and you can build a decent enough bike for 10% of a typical new bike. I've built a 2003 Marin full suss with discs, DT swiss wheels etc for about £250 all in. My 1998 version of the same bike cost about £80 so far whereas I spent £1300 or so for the 2003 Wolf Ridge with the Hope upgrade and sold it a few months later - 'cos it was shit compared to an earlier Mt. Vision I'd tried to emulate.
Its an odd world out there but with 30 years of well manufactured bikes and parts swirling around, you can build what you want, how you want for as little or as much money as you are prepared to spend.
It had Suntour forks with steel stanchions.
There was too much pressed steel for the price.
Personally I think there's a lot of good value out there if you rootle around but there's a shite load of overpriced chuff too. But as already said, it's gone too far from the simple engineering form a bike takes.
Go 'retro' (in reality, secondhand) and you can build a decent enough bike for 10% of a typical new bike. I've built a 2003 Marin full suss with discs, DT swiss wheels etc for about £250 all in. My 1998 version of the same bike cost about £80 so far whereas I spent £1300 or so for the 2003 Wolf Ridge with the Hope upgrade and sold it a few months later - 'cos it was shit compared to an earlier Mt. Vision I'd tried to emulate.
Its an odd world out there but with 30 years of well manufactured bikes and parts swirling around, you can build what you want, how you want for as little or as much money as you are prepared to spend.