Bikes like marmite?

ameybrook":2mjg4xcj said:
cherrybomb":2mjg4xcj said:
ameybrook":2mjg4xcj said:
Typical fodder from you.

When exactly did I piss on your fireworks and make it personal?

Hey I'm just saying stupid is as stupid says. Dont make dumb statements like that and I wont call you out on them.

Yes, because your contribution to this thread wasn't elitist and opinionated to the point of stupid. What does a knowledgable person like yourself ride incidentally?
 
HarryHill_fight.jpg
 
ameybrook":2l1irqtl said:
Kona Paul":2l1irqtl said:
ameybrook":2l1irqtl said:
Yes, because your contribution to this thread wasn't elitist and opinionated to the point of stupid. What does a knowledgable person like yourself ride incidentally?

http://www.retrobike.co.uk/?cat=6

One of two people to have been profiled.

Opinionated? Isn't that the point? Everytime I speak up, a thread gets derailed. :roll:

Should I be impressed, or what does being profiled have to do with it? I'm afraid I don't see your point.
 
Kona Paul":2n4qg0oy said:
Should I be impressed, or what does being profiled have to do with it? I'm afraid I don't see your point.

You asked what I rode. I'm one of the most visible people on here.
 
ENOUGH ALREADY!!!!! Dont make me come over there and bang your heads together fellas...take all comments on the chin eh? 8)


Back to the sh1t bike discussions please... :P

oh and I own a PRST-1 :oops: which is going through an 'all british' build currently...anyone who hates them has no soul I tell thee! :wink:
 
As much as you can hate the brand, you have to give respect to a bike that was innovative is some way or another

I don't like Trek, but I respect the OCLV bikes. There were few that were lighter. And they were strong (enough). And made in the US.

I hate Proflex, especially for their use of elastomers, but I have to give some respect to that silly fork. It's good that someone took the time to rethink wheel path on a bike, even if it wasn't implemented well.

I think Slingshots are ridiculous... but one of the earliest full-suspension bikes out there.

Softride... ok, those bikes are just stupid. The stem was a good idea before suspension was available, but the beam?!

Canondale headshock... just in case this sport hasn't crushed enough testicles already, Canondale decided to raise the top tube. Besides, rebuilding them is a nightmare.

High-end bikes that cost a lot of money simply because someone didn't take the time to figure out a way to make them inexpensively and use obsolete technology or simply break. Ellsworth comes to mind.

Expensive anything that comes from Asia.
 
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