2manyoranges
Old School Grand Master
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I was mowing the lawn as the usual random thought processes kicked in with the tedium of going up and down, up and down, up....
And I was thinking through dates...and which bike when....
And....Yes yes, I know that the RS Fellowship was doing some amazing stuff all over UK and Europe for decades after ww2, and that GF says you can do most trails on a shopping bike, but which bike actually worked, and got me up and down things which I still ride in anger?
For me it was a 15.5 inch Marin Palisades in steel, Tange, blue paint, chainstay mounted U brake (mighty powerful but zero mud clearance). In 1987 it replaced a, 18 inch Cannondale SM600 which had been stolen, and I was not sad at all. The Cannondale was so short in the top tube, and such a low stack height. And the headtube joints had a habit of cracking on that series frame, allegedly. I'd had quite a few 'mountain bikes' prior to that, but the Marin was the one which really unlocked serious riding. Manitou 1 copies by ProCircuit on the front, Mavic 231 replacement rims...and...Biopace….
It was the geometry and tubeset which seemed to be the key. It had low standover and longish top tube, reasonable seattube angle (not the slack things which abounded) and the tubeset rode with good steel zing and forgiveness. It did thousands and thousands of miles - replacement was with the top end Marins with longer top tubes and higher end tubes.
That was the one for me.
And I was thinking through dates...and which bike when....
And....Yes yes, I know that the RS Fellowship was doing some amazing stuff all over UK and Europe for decades after ww2, and that GF says you can do most trails on a shopping bike, but which bike actually worked, and got me up and down things which I still ride in anger?
For me it was a 15.5 inch Marin Palisades in steel, Tange, blue paint, chainstay mounted U brake (mighty powerful but zero mud clearance). In 1987 it replaced a, 18 inch Cannondale SM600 which had been stolen, and I was not sad at all. The Cannondale was so short in the top tube, and such a low stack height. And the headtube joints had a habit of cracking on that series frame, allegedly. I'd had quite a few 'mountain bikes' prior to that, but the Marin was the one which really unlocked serious riding. Manitou 1 copies by ProCircuit on the front, Mavic 231 replacement rims...and...Biopace….
It was the geometry and tubeset which seemed to be the key. It had low standover and longish top tube, reasonable seattube angle (not the slack things which abounded) and the tubeset rode with good steel zing and forgiveness. It did thousands and thousands of miles - replacement was with the top end Marins with longer top tubes and higher end tubes.
That was the one for me.