20 Questions 20 Questions with Keith Bontrager

Second in the retrobike 20 questions series is a man who will need no introduction, Keith Bontrager. If you really need one check out his entry in the MTB Hall of Fame.

Building%20in%20the%20garage%201980.jpg

Keith building in the garage 1980

Retrobike: How's life?

Keith Bontrager: Life is pretty good, though complicated sometimes. Nothing
surprising I guess.


RB: Keith, what is the mtb holy grail?

KB: This is one for Gary F. He's best at that kind of question.

RB: And what is the mtb holy fail?

KB: Getting too carried away with the mtb holy grail.

RB: Desert Island Discs Scenario - one luxury. Bike or corkscrew? Or
something else?

KB: Bike, as long as there isn't too much sand. I have lots of ways to
get a cork out of a bottle besides a corkscrew.

RB: Wine. Bike. Love. Pick two?

KB: Bike & love. You didn't say anything about beer and tequila so
I'll improvise accordingly.

RB: You've always been seen about over this side of the pond. What is it
about the UK that has had you racing up wet English mountains on a cx
bike or trudging the innevitable mudfest conveyor belt that is Mountain
Mayhem 24hr each year (but we love it), when you've got such a lovely
array of nature over there?

KB: I get bored laying around on the beach in the sun and I have all
these nice warm clothes I never get to wear when I am here. Plus, I
really like falling over in the mud.



RB: Keith, very important to know this about a chap, what's your
favourite cake? The bike celebrity cakometer reckons you're a Dundee
kind of a man....?

KB: I had to look up a recipe for the Dundee Cake.

Yuucchhh...

Tipsy Apple Cake is currently my fave, made with Lairds Apple Jack, though I
am fickle so that could change anytime...

*(thumps Retrobike cake-o-meter as it clearly doesn't work very well) - ed.


RB: Should anodised purple ever come back?

KB: No.

KB%20racing%20motocross%20on%20his%20CZ%201976.jpg

KB racing motocross on his CZ 1976

RB: Or are you unaware it ever went away?

KB: I don't get out much.

RB: Progression is innevitable and usually nessessary, but they just
don't make bikes as pretty as they did do they?

KB: To my eye the modern high performance racing bicycles are much
better looking machines now than they ever were before.

Having said that, the latest shapes owe much less to an individual's
craft than they do to advanced computer modeling and high tech
materials; F1 vs Model T.

I enjoy handmade bikes when they are well executed, and I have very high
standards in that regard. But I like them in the way one enjoys nicely
made antiques, in the proper historic context.

None of that applies to what kind of bikes I think we should be riding
of course. These are machines, not art. If you are a pro, you ride the
fastest thing you can get. If you aren't, then you can ride anything
that suits you.

RB: What are you most proud of having been involved with in the world of
cycling?

KB: Sorting out myth.

RB: Do you have a favourite bike component, one that you have/ should
have stockpiled?

KB: Super X tires and some Chris King hubs that we used on the first Race
lite MTB wheels.

RB: Do you have a favourite bike? One you choose to ride over all the
others?

KB: No, I don't have any favourites. I am fond of my new Fuel though.

KB%20on%20Slickrock%20in%20Moab%201995.jpg

KB on Slickrock in Moab 1995

RB: It's 'not about the bike'. Or is it?

KB: It's not, not for me anyway.

Not%20simple%20paint%20-%20Custom%20Frame%20from%20the%20mid%2080s.jpg

Bontrager custom road bike 1980s

RB: What's your favourite thing about cycling?

KB: Simply transport. And watching kids ride. Oh yeah, and nailing a
complicated line in technical singletrack.

RB: Taking in to consideration all the memories and experiences we all
have of our own mountain biking timelines, do you have a fondest mtb/
cycling period? Has it even happpened yet?

KB: I don't. There are some ride's I've done that were very enjoyable.
But the mtb timeline thing had little to do with those. I even had a
good ride on a steel hardtail once...

RB: I won't ask the usual question of where biking's headed? But rather,
do you think like most stuff, things come full circle in the end and the
classic steel hardtail will make a return in more than a niche trend
kind of a way.

KB: No. A fashion cycle will not make it perform better or less likely
to rust.

Steel is an inexpensive material that is simple to work with. Those
are it's strong attributes and enough to justify making some types of
bikes from it.

RB: With all the hoo har about handmade bikes and the resurgence of
steel hardtails by small manufacturers being all the rage, are you
tempted to re-introduce the classic skinny tubed Race Lite, but to a new
generation?

KB: No.

I'd like to design some new steel city bikes and touring bikes, but not
re-introduce steel hardtails.

RB: Ok then, would you consider putting the Jones 700cx30/32mm cross
tyre back into production just for me? Oh go on...it's the best cx tyre
I've used... :)

KB: I would, but there are still plenty laying around on shelves in bike
shops, so I'd have to let those dry up first. On the other hand, maybe
the ones that are still laying around might be a sign? The tires were
too small and too smooth for most cross courses.

RB: Ok, Keith, what's it all about?*

KB: I have no idea... I am an engineer. But I am having a decent time
realizing that I have no idea...

*(apart form being the eternal question, this relates to the fact that
every time I come out of the end of my favourite piece of singletrack
that I've been riding for 22 years, I say to myself..."That's what it's
all about Keith". (In reference to a line in a great but not that well
known tv series called 'Stella Street' - check out the first series - it
was pure genius. :)

An%20Aluminum%20and%20Steel%20road%20frame%20-%20mid%2080s.jpg

Bontrager composite road bike 1980s
 
SC BRANCH SONG

WE ARE THE FANS FROM SC
SUPPORTERS OF THE MIGHTY RED WE ARE FAMILY,
TRAVELLING ALL AROUND THE GLOBE FOR LIVERPOOL FC...

{chorus}

WE ARE THE FANS..."FROM SC"..AND WE SUPPORT OUR TEAM
THE MIGHTY REDS ..."FROM ANFIELD".. AND WE ALL AGREE,
THEY PLAY WITH PRIDE... "AND DIGNITY"...FOR THE WORLD TO SEE...
WE ARE THE FANS "FROM NZ"... AND WE SUPPORT OUR TEAM.

THE GAFFER IS A CLUED UP COACH HE'LL KEEP US ON THE BALL,
HE'LL HELP US PLAY THE BEST WE CAN SO WE CAN WIN IT ALL,
AND WHEN WE VISIT ANFIELD STEEPED IN HISTORY,
WE'RE GLAD THAT WE'RE SUPPORTERS OF LIVERPOOL FC...

;-)
 
The chant was obviously, and innocently swiped from an NZ fan site - all respect. But i do humit to myself daily. Really I do.
 
This shirt?

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jimg/2815171088/in/pool-vintage_bontrager

(Hi KB!)
 
I played football with Keith at the Malverns in 1991 and I was super stoked even if he did wear a scum shirt. Two years of grafting like mad on me paper round and I saved enough to buy a pimp ass OR Race frame and what a bike it was. Those bikes were made by a real thinking man and as well as being light enough, they also took a thrashing. This was evident because I was racing DH on it in 1997 and getting some pretty solid results (and early DH frames were crap). I put an original Z1 on the front and charged. The frame is still in the garage and WILL be done up to it's original glory one day. I almost shed a tear when I heard there would be no more Bontrager frames but life goes on. Thanks for a wicked frame Keith and happy riding!
 
I love the look of a quality steel hardtail, especially mid-1990s era, but I've never enjoyed riding a trail as much as I do on my 2008 Fuel EX. I still have a Prestige/Concept Brodie Catalyst and a True Temper GT Corrado, but they are more for a rush of nostalgia than a rush of adrenaline.
 
Question for Keith.
I am dying to get my old Bontrager Race back on the trail, and soon. THe only problem is I cant find a freaking quality suspension fork for it. Any ideas???? This was and still is the BEST mountain bike frame Ive ever rode on!!
 
I still have a copy of that ad somewhere. I became a Liverpool supporter in the late 1970's. I was walking home from school (in Belfast) and a big skinhead grabbed me by the throat and asked "Who d'you like, Liverpool or Man United?" You could only like one of those two clubs in Ireland in the 1970's. So I guessed and said "Liverpool" and the skinhead let me go, patting me on the head saying "Good lad!" I've been a Liverpool supporter ever since. To bring things full circle; even my Race Lite is red... I think KB's comments about those of us that aren’t riding for podiums can be extrapolated into an explanation for the explosion in the popularity of hand-made frames these days. That and the fact that the fastest bike is not always the most fun to ride. But when Bontrager was making the Race and Race Lite, they WERE among the fastest and most “advanced” race-worthy frames around.
 
KB is the only person I've ever met who left me awe struck when he spoke to me. I felt a total plank afterwards and had the piss taken out of me the whole 200 miles home afterwards!
 
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