fattiman":2mk8a76m said:Parkpre
...and indeed this is why Nigel's business plan was doomed to fail; after spending so much with the design agency and decal tooling, little money was left to invest in the frame development and the dreams of a launch at the top of Alp d'Huez were scuppered once it was found that only 47p remained for the air fare. In a last-ditch effort to cut costs, the intended 753 Dynaflite was swapped for some scaffold tubing salvaged from a local skip and the original custom titanium lug order cancelled in favour of a batch of stamped steel items that had been rejected by one of the well-known Sunday paper colour supplement catalogue brands. The result? A pretty average steel sports bike in a crowded market - albeit one which revolutionised head tube branding.531Man":1eeqm566 said:Re. ZG862 you missed the further elusive arty nature of the logo is compounded with the ambiguity introduced by the questions raised, "is that an 'n' overlying a hidden 'p' representing the full Nigel Partridge name, or a question mark '?' to draw attention to the ' - ' mystery interpretation" ?
Nigel needs to do some explaining.
That's some top arty advertising agency metaphysical input paid for there.
It would, of course, be a schoolboy error to take this obvious course of action. Original Nigel Partridge frames (manufactured under licence by Acme Corp) are sometimes missed by the experts at Sotheby's and change hands for pennies, never attaining their true worth. Not something that would have made young Nigel say he was happy...531Man":1eeqm566 said:Or it could of course, by googling some images be an early steel Parkpre.