Gaddmeister
Retrobike Rider
Re:
In 2007 bikes from the nineties were not that old. We are 2017 and still setting the same benchmark? I have found imho that naughties bikes are in no man's land. I have just bought myself a 2005 bike for a song. However, there seems to be no interest in this era? Why?
Because fundamentally we love the era of mystery and constànt change/experimentation. By the naughties we had perfected it and wet literally stuck in no man's land. In the current decade we have decided to move things on by changing wheel sizes and going electric. It's a tough one really. I think us true retrobikers are remembering and harbouring the exciting times in mountain biking, the stuff happening after the late nineties is just natural progress, hence not so interesting? I have been advised that the best things added to a bike since the nineties are disc brakes and wider bars. I have bought myself a 2005 bike that has these fine attributes. Being 12 years old does it not make it retro? I think it does. We are all interested in the same thing, why even separate it? It's a bike, just a little different. Maybe folk are moving on but because it's stuck at pre 97 people are losing interest. I say keep it as mountain and road. No dates. It welcomes modern riders and teaches them as well as us older generation offering valuable advice?
In 2007 bikes from the nineties were not that old. We are 2017 and still setting the same benchmark? I have found imho that naughties bikes are in no man's land. I have just bought myself a 2005 bike for a song. However, there seems to be no interest in this era? Why?
Because fundamentally we love the era of mystery and constànt change/experimentation. By the naughties we had perfected it and wet literally stuck in no man's land. In the current decade we have decided to move things on by changing wheel sizes and going electric. It's a tough one really. I think us true retrobikers are remembering and harbouring the exciting times in mountain biking, the stuff happening after the late nineties is just natural progress, hence not so interesting? I have been advised that the best things added to a bike since the nineties are disc brakes and wider bars. I have bought myself a 2005 bike that has these fine attributes. Being 12 years old does it not make it retro? I think it does. We are all interested in the same thing, why even separate it? It's a bike, just a little different. Maybe folk are moving on but because it's stuck at pre 97 people are losing interest. I say keep it as mountain and road. No dates. It welcomes modern riders and teaches them as well as us older generation offering valuable advice?