BoTM BotM November 2021 non 26" wheels - The Vote

Bike of The Month

Pick your winner

  • LGF 1992 Centurion

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Bawgixer’s 1991 GT Quatrefoil

    Votes: 4 4.4%
  • Lhatch4's 1985/86 Raleigh Mountain Tour Grand Mesa

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • WimVDD's 1991 Scott Junior Team

    Votes: 3 3.3%
  • SeeingisBelievingGTMuseum (aka gm1230126) 1995 GT Zaskar 24"

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • joglo's 1991 Diamond Back Overdrive

    Votes: 6 6.6%
  • doctor-bond's 1988 Cannondale 24"x24" SM700

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • 24pouces 86 Hanebrink SE Shocker

    Votes: 40 44.0%
  • GrahamJohnWallace's 1981 Cleland Range-Rider

    Votes: 18 19.8%
  • DrGooGoo's 1986 Cannondale SM600

    Votes: 2 2.2%
  • Kevhls Minitou HT kids bike 20"

    Votes: 3 3.3%
  • REtrouble's 1982 English Cycles Range Rider

    Votes: 6 6.6%
  • RetroJIM's 1991 Marin Sausalito

    Votes: 3 3.3%

  • Total voters
    91
  • Poll closed .

raidan73

Moderator
Archivist
Retrobike Rider
BoTM Triple Crown
BoTM Winner
Gold Trader
PoTM Winner
98+ BoTM Winner
Rocky Mountain Fan
Brodie Fan
Feedback
View
Well I should've probably been a bit clearer on the criteria for entry this month. I got caught up in defining the parameters of the wheel size and not the actual type of bikes. Anyway I always seem to be apologising for such oversights but this time I'm not going to! I've let the hybrids in. @Bawgixer's Schwinn has had the chop (but his tandem supersedes it anyway). @d8mok's Spooky has also been axed, based on it being too new. That leaves this lot and I'm sure the votes will do the talking. The poll will run for a week.

LGF 1992 Centurion
0.jpg

Bawgixer’s 1991 GT Quatrefoil
1.jpeg


Lhatch4's 1985/86 Raleigh Mountain Tour Grand Mesa
2.jpg


WimVDD's 1991 Scott Junior Team
3.jpeg

SeeingisBelievingGTMuseum (aka gm1230126) 1995 GT Zaskar 24"
4.JPG


joglo's 1991 Diamond Back Overdrive
5.jpg


doctor-bond's 1988 Cannondale 24"x24" SM700
6.JPG


24pouces 86 Hanebrink SE Shocker
7.jpg


GrahamJohnWallace's 1981 Cleland Range-Rider
8.JPG


DrGooGoo's 1986 Cannondale SM600
9.jpeg
 
Kevhls Minitou HT kids bike 20"
10.jpg


REtrouble's 1982 English Cycles Range Rider
11.jpg


RetroJIM's 1991 Marin Sausalito
12.jpg
 
Although they are not the fanciest bikes this month, they are definitely some of the most rare!
The Hanebrink (probably the first rear suspension bike) and the Cleland and the English Cycles Range Riders are from the pre-production mountain bike era before the 26" wheel was the standard.
 
Great to have such a wide variety of non 26" wheeled bikes.

The history of mountain-bikes has been influenced by the economics involved in creating new tyre sizes.
In the case of larger diameter mountain-bike tyres: Why invest in the manufacture a larger tyres, when they will not fit existing bicycles?

The commercial dominance of the 26" size between 1982 and 2000+ was more a matter of what was commercially expedient for manufacturers than what was optimal from the rider's point of view. However, on the fringes of the MTB world there was much more interest in alternative wheel sizes.

A brief History of US mountain-bike wheel sizes:
In the US mountain-biking starts with John Finlay-Scott built one 26" bike and several French 650b based roughstuff bikes in the 50s and 60s.

The Marin and Larkspur rider's used 26" Uniroyal knobby tyres on their Klunkers in the 1970s.

In the 80's Fisher Kelly and Ritchey chose this size for their bikes because the tyres were readily available and less expensive than larger sizes because they were taxed as children's size. They had access to knobbly Finnish Hakkapeliitta 650b and 700c tyres from 1980 but import costs from the UK and US taxes made them much more expensive. These winter snow tyres were not produced all year round, so supplies were unreliable.

Gary Fisher on the history of MTB wheel size

US frame-builder Bruce Gordon solved this problem in 1988 when he had copies of the 47mm wide Finnish tyres manufactured. Other US frame-builders chose these Rock'n'Road tyres in preference to 26", and in the 1990's one of them, Wes Williams, persuaded Gary Fisher to fund the manufacture of a 52mm tyre. A size that rounds up to an overall diameter of 29".

Gary Fisher was influential enough on to encourage the development of the early 29er bikes and components from the late nineties onward. In 2007, Kirk Pacenti reintroduced the 650b (27.5") size, because he thought that the 26" wheels were too small and the 29er wheels too big. He was unaware that Ritchey and other US frame-builders had made 670b mountain bikes in the early 80's.

The history of UK off-road bicycle tyres was very different, but apart from promoting the 700c size, the Brit's did not have any long-term international influence.
 
Last edited:
Great to have such a wide variety of non 26" wheeled bikes.

The history of mountain-bikes has been influenced by the economics involved in creating new tyre sizes.
In the case of larger diameter mountain-bike tyres: Why invest in the manufacture a larger tyres, when they will not fit existing bicycles?

The commercial dominance of the 26" size between 1982 and 2000+ was more a matter of what was commercially expedient for manufacturers than what was optimal from the rider's point of view. However, on the fringes of the MTB world there was much more interest in alternative wheel sizes.

A brief History of US mountain-bike wheel sizes:
In the US mountain-biking starts with John Finlay-Scott built one 26" bike and several French 650b based roughstuff bikes in the 50s and 60s.

The Marin and Larkspur riders used 26" Uniroyal knobby tyres on their Klunkers in the 1970s.

In the 80's Fisher Kelly and Ritchey chose this size for their bikes because the tyres were readily available and less expensive than larger sizes because they were taxed as children's size. They had access to knobbly Finnish Hakkapeliitta 650b and 700c tyres from 1980 but import costs from the UK and US taxes made them much more expensive. These winter snow tyres were not produced all year round, so supplies were unreliable.

Gary Fisher on the history of MTB wheel size

US frame-builder Bruce Gordon solved this problem in 1988 when he had copies of the 47mm wide Finnish tyres manufactured. Other US frame-builders chose these Rock'n'Road tyres in preference to 26", and in the 1990's of them persuaded Gary Fisher to fund the manufacture of a 52mm tyre. A size that rounds up to an overall diameter of 29".

Gary Fisher was influential enough on to encourage the development of the early 29er bikes and components from the late nineties onward. In 2007, then Kirk Pacenti reintroduced the 650b (27.5") size, because he thought that the 26" wheels were too small and the 29er wheels too big. He was unaware that Ritchey and other US frame-builders had made 670b mountain bikes in the early 80's.

The history of UK off-road bicycle tyres was very different, but apart from the 700c size, we have not had any long-term international influence.
Wow, a lot of interesting info.
I didn't know that Marin and Larkspur made MTBs in the 1970s.
 
A great and very diverse selection of entries, hard to choose a single favourite, though the Raleigh does make me want to ride it the most :cool:
 

Latest posts

Back
Top