Hey, this is my very first thread on the forum.
I’ve lurked for ages and resurrected a handful of ‘90-era rigs like Ritchey P23, Checker Pig CPX 9000, Breezer Storm, Cannondale M800, Orange Prestige, Yeti Fro (though I never got around to documenting that one) but never felt the urge to document the process—until this bike landed in my garage . Maybe it’s the history, maybe it’s the lines, maybe it’s just me finally giving back to a community that’s saved me countless times… whatever the reason, this Pro Floater deserves its own spotlight.
For years that resume kept the Mantis Pro Floater parked at the very top of my one-day list. Then, while casually scrolling Facebook, I caught a post from John Grafton showing his own baby-blue Pro Floater dripping in Grafton CNC candy. Seeing a modern photo of a bike I’d only ever admired in grainy magazine scans flipped a switch: I was going to track one down no matter how long it took.
A few months later, I heard that a local collector had a medium Pro Floater hanging in his workshop—original paint, straight tubes, linkage still tight. I showed up with coffee, cash, and the grin of a 13-year-old… and wheeled out with the frame that’s about to star in my first Retrobike thread.
So here we go!
So the next step is i wanted a rider, not a museum piece: early-’93 spec, silver alloy bits everywhere, black accents, and just enough anodised flash to make the purists twitch. Everything had to be era-correct (or at least era-believable) without going full NOS-only madness.
Still can't decide about the groupset, XT or XTR or maybe Suntour XC Pro. Can you guys help me to decide?
also i’m torn on decals: leave the slightly yellowed originals or re-pop a fresh set?
Thanks for reading, happy to hear suggestions, or just let me know if I’ve committed any period-incorrect sins!
Cheers,
I’ve lurked for ages and resurrected a handful of ‘90-era rigs like Ritchey P23, Checker Pig CPX 9000, Breezer Storm, Cannondale M800, Orange Prestige, Yeti Fro (though I never got around to documenting that one) but never felt the urge to document the process—until this bike landed in my garage . Maybe it’s the history, maybe it’s the lines, maybe it’s just me finally giving back to a community that’s saved me countless times… whatever the reason, this Pro Floater deserves its own spotlight.

Why the Mantis Pro Floater sits at the top of my grail list
- Boutique roots. Richard Cunningham’s Mantis Cycles (founded 1981, SoCal) was the skunk-works that gave us the X-frame Valkyrie, elevated-stay XCR, and finally the Pro Floater (1992-1995)—a concentric-pivot, motocross-inspired full-suss frame built in well under 300 units.
- Ahead of its time. A sub-27 lb dualie when most “F.S.” bikes were boat anchors; the rocker isolates pedalling forces so well it still feels contemporary.
- Details that reward nerds. TIG-welded Easton 7005, boxed wishbone stays, bolt-on cable guides, pastel factory paint—every corner whispers small-batch craftsmanship.

For years that resume kept the Mantis Pro Floater parked at the very top of my one-day list. Then, while casually scrolling Facebook, I caught a post from John Grafton showing his own baby-blue Pro Floater dripping in Grafton CNC candy. Seeing a modern photo of a bike I’d only ever admired in grainy magazine scans flipped a switch: I was going to track one down no matter how long it took.

A few months later, I heard that a local collector had a medium Pro Floater hanging in his workshop—original paint, straight tubes, linkage still tight. I showed up with coffee, cash, and the grin of a 13-year-old… and wheeled out with the frame that’s about to star in my first Retrobike thread.
So here we go!



So the next step is i wanted a rider, not a museum piece: early-’93 spec, silver alloy bits everywhere, black accents, and just enough anodised flash to make the purists twitch. Everything had to be era-correct (or at least era-believable) without going full NOS-only madness.
Still can't decide about the groupset, XT or XTR or maybe Suntour XC Pro. Can you guys help me to decide?
also i’m torn on decals: leave the slightly yellowed originals or re-pop a fresh set?
Thanks for reading, happy to hear suggestions, or just let me know if I’ve committed any period-incorrect sins!
Cheers,