I just love bikes and cycling. Have ridden and enjoyed most everything from a first steed (Raleigh Tomahawk) to a Puch 3 speed 26" road bike with steel wheels, Carlton racing bike (another build from scratch) a Dawes Tracker, a self-built early Specialized Rockhopper, RM Thin Air, RM Vertex, a Club Roost XC4, Kona Cindercone, Daewoo Shuttle (!!!), Cannondale F900SL, M-Trax 1500, Diamondback V-link, 1970s Raleigh folder and a Dahon Mu.
Currently have a defunct Raleigh Apex which weighs a ton but gave me lots of fun, a Kona Ute - which is a 40lb ship of a bike and cruises at 8mph like a dream full of groceries/beer/camping gear, and a battered old Cannondale F700 which serves as my only XC bike, Headshok is so gritty I use lockout 90%.
Current obsession is a 97 M-Trax 150 that is being rebuilt as a training/touring/exploring bike. Can't wait to get it finished.
Now, did I have more fun on the £2K Vertex or the £16 Raleigh Apex?
Truth is I had most fun on the Dawes Tracker (£275 new), my first MTB ('ATB' at the time of purchase) - I put more miles on that than any other bike - it did road tours, mountain descents, singletrack and commuting. It had Exage and thumbies. Funny I just put Dawes Tracker into Google and found a kindred spirit who wrote:
http://www.bikeforums.net/archive/index.php/t-149097.html
It just worked, and had a little bit of 'zing' in the ride (Reynolds 501?) which helped a lot. So, arguably, did my lack of knowledge and experience about higher-end MTBs. Nonetheless I soon became an LBS lurker... weighing and trying out Kona Cindercones, Kilaueas, Explosifs, Sunn Columbus Nivachrome wafer-thin steel exotica etc...unable to afford, soldiered on on the Dawes until I found a Cindercone in Cash Converters. It was hardly life changing, for me, at least. Mostly because it was a tad too small and constantly at the repair shop or in the shed (self-build on a budget).
Least fun of all was the old Raleigh folder. What a pile.
Yes, I sometimes dream about the 'perfect' frame and the 'perfect' build, but these dreams are always enjoyed with an eye on the reality - ie there is nothing more 'perfect' than a day on the road/trail and coming home to a hot bath with a grin on your rain/mud spattered face. I've done this on all types of bikes.
Having a light/exotic bike can help a lot, but having a bike that is mechanically sound and fits your bad self like a glove is far more important - whether that bike is a Ti Dreambuild or a Hi Ten no-name?
But cleaning, fettling, polishing and admiring is fun too. Ah, the tapestry of bikeage...
Onwards and upwards, downwards and sidewards. A ridden steed is the best steed! Now, do I want a lightweight road bike to get fit and enjoy cycling on another level...or is that mid-life crisis? Could be both
PS I forgot to say, I haven't found Retrobike too snobby. You are nice people. And I am an XT junkie who dabbles in Deore.