2manyoranges
Old School Grand Master
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I had a dig around and there are some for a lot less on ebay - some mid-20s in used condition - they were designed at the crossover from cantilevers to V brakes - the STX Vs were lovely things - very simple alloy ‘wings’ - and would look great on your frame - BUT there is indeed a view that the adjustable leverage position meant that they were designed to be interchangeable between Vs and cantilever brakes ... that’s what I recall from the time I was using them. So I think that’s a ‘yes’.
And another ‘Yes’... indeed there is a performance gulf between 90’s bikes and the current crop. I started mountain-biking in the mid ‘80s, and went from machines which were simply terrifying off road to things which were very capable - the Marins, and Breezers, and Oranges, and Chances etc - in the early 90s they reached a state of technical development where very demanding off road riding became possible. I did thousands of miles on the South Downs on these bikes, including screaming downhills and very tough ups - like the long, rutted climb out of Kingston (Nr Lewes). We had a ball. I think things started to shift when Brant Richards played with angles, and others like Cy Turner and Dan Stanton did hugely thoughtful design work - ‘long low and slack’ has been the design direction. Max Commencal was working hard too, but mainly impacting the downhill scene. I now ride those same hills on the very latest bikes - Cotic and Stanton and Transition - and do it all in more comfort and safety than on my ‘90s rigs, and definitely a whole lot faster. Could they still be ridden on 90s retro bikes. Yes, absolutely. Would I pick a modern bike to ride over a retro bike if I was riding in earnest? Yes, absolutely.
I love the fact that retro bikes are being saved, built, rebuilt, and ridden. it’s good in so many ways - the environment, the memory, the legacy....
And another ‘Yes’... indeed there is a performance gulf between 90’s bikes and the current crop. I started mountain-biking in the mid ‘80s, and went from machines which were simply terrifying off road to things which were very capable - the Marins, and Breezers, and Oranges, and Chances etc - in the early 90s they reached a state of technical development where very demanding off road riding became possible. I did thousands of miles on the South Downs on these bikes, including screaming downhills and very tough ups - like the long, rutted climb out of Kingston (Nr Lewes). We had a ball. I think things started to shift when Brant Richards played with angles, and others like Cy Turner and Dan Stanton did hugely thoughtful design work - ‘long low and slack’ has been the design direction. Max Commencal was working hard too, but mainly impacting the downhill scene. I now ride those same hills on the very latest bikes - Cotic and Stanton and Transition - and do it all in more comfort and safety than on my ‘90s rigs, and definitely a whole lot faster. Could they still be ridden on 90s retro bikes. Yes, absolutely. Would I pick a modern bike to ride over a retro bike if I was riding in earnest? Yes, absolutely.
I love the fact that retro bikes are being saved, built, rebuilt, and ridden. it’s good in so many ways - the environment, the memory, the legacy....