dirttorpedo
Senior Retro Guru
The discussion of crap brands that made good bikes got me thinking about this. I saw my first mountain bike at Caps when shopping for a bike to use as a commuter when I started university. I couldn't afford one then and bought a Norco road bike used and rode it hard for a couple of years. I was always looking enviously at the guys who could afford mountain bikes. My brother decided to buy a mountain bike and asked me to find him a used one at a decent price. I got him an 88 Ritchey Force at the local consignment place. He let me ride it that summer because he was working out of town. I was smitten and wanted my own.
The next year I decided to buy one myself. After testing a number of bikes (GT Tequesta, Kona Lava Dome, etc.) I bought a Rockymountain Fusion (basically the same bike as my brother's Ritchey). So my bikes before I became a collector were:
89 Rockymountain Fusion (sold)
1991 Stumpjumper FS (sold)
1997 Norco Sasquatch (with Bomber Z5 upgrade) - (sold)
2004 Kona Scrap (stripped and gifted frame to friend)
2005 Kona Stinky Deelux (Frame bought used and built with Kona Scrap parts) - (Sold)
It was about this time that the twins arrived and I didn't have the time to mountain bike. As well mountain biking became so focused on downhill fall line riding / free riding that I was getting hurt a lot or breaking bike components so often that I sold my bike.
Then a number of years later I started building old steel or aluminum hardtails into commuters. Buying old mountain bikes became a bit of a habit and here I am.
So what was your bike progression?
The next year I decided to buy one myself. After testing a number of bikes (GT Tequesta, Kona Lava Dome, etc.) I bought a Rockymountain Fusion (basically the same bike as my brother's Ritchey). So my bikes before I became a collector were:
89 Rockymountain Fusion (sold)
1991 Stumpjumper FS (sold)
1997 Norco Sasquatch (with Bomber Z5 upgrade) - (sold)
2004 Kona Scrap (stripped and gifted frame to friend)
2005 Kona Stinky Deelux (Frame bought used and built with Kona Scrap parts) - (Sold)
It was about this time that the twins arrived and I didn't have the time to mountain bike. As well mountain biking became so focused on downhill fall line riding / free riding that I was getting hurt a lot or breaking bike components so often that I sold my bike.
Then a number of years later I started building old steel or aluminum hardtails into commuters. Buying old mountain bikes became a bit of a habit and here I am.
So what was your bike progression?
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