Re:
The History Man":epf7vnig said:
Throughout history similar technologies have been discovered in parallel with no possible communication between non-competing cultures. Perhaps this is another example. You all built Mountain Bikes.
I agree that bikes have been modified for off road use at various times and in various countries around the world. Sometimes this has been done for practical reasons and sometimes for fun or for sport.
In 1970-80s California they had all the parts required to make a commercially viable off-road bicycle especially fat knobbly tyres that were not available elsewhere. More importantly they had the eyes of the world leisure industry watching out for the next trend that could follow on from windsurfing, skateboarding , BMX etc. Even though the early Ritchey framed bikes were very expensive, due to Californian affluence Fisher and Kelly were able to sell as many as they could make, thus proving there was a market. With just a little bit of marketing know how courtesy of Fisher, the word was out, the entrepreneurs moved in and far eastern component manufacturers raced to California in order to copy whatever they could.
Even back then pre-internet, there was a great deal of international communication. This was essential to the development of the US mountain bike as the lightweight frame-building and component culture, the wide ratio derailleur gear-chains and cantilever brakes all came from Europe. It's even possible that the original Ritchey design owes something to the English roughstuff bike that Tom Ritchey made for John Finley-Scott a year or so before he designed his first Mountain bike.
Meanwhile in Britain, off-road bicycles were seen in a very different light. They were cheap, often homemade, for kids & teenagers, and had been around for the best part of thirty years without very much money being made from them.
Around 1983, Raleigh was caught between following the latest trend coming out of California or following their instinct that there was no long term market for such bicycles. In the end they decided that Mountain Biking was going to be a short lived fad and so they would not manufacture them in Britain. Thus opening up the UK market to those who better understood the potential of the US mountain bikes in the form of Ridgeback, Saracen, Dawes, & Muddy Fox Specialized etc, etc.
But the commercial success of the US mountain bikes doesn't mean that other earlier traditions of off-road cycling should not be recorded by history.