I thought steel frame builders introduced these to cope with longer travel forks, so i'd have put it later than 1997. But does this mean it was far east built?
Does 853 define a specific period for the ala Carte? They certainly aren't made from it anymore, and as stated it wasn't around before 95/96.
Gussets were a very old thing, Keith Bontrager was putting them on all his bikes for years (and certainly before 1995), Doug Bradbury was using them in the 80s and Cunningham before him.
Looks like I was wrong though, while the company was bought in 1997 the factory closed in 1999 and production moved, so it could be between 1995 and 99. Need to know what that headset size is though, wold have thought 1 1/8" if it's modern 853?
Funnily enough Paul, this one (which I take it is too small for you anyway) is made of 853, is claimed to be US-built, does have disc mounts, but doesn't appear to have gussets.
Which seems to imply that they used gussets before they fitted disc mounts, then they stopped the gussets and started fitting disc mounts, then they went back to gussets again.
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That one might have a gusset (but isn't the frame to which i was referring), the gusseting on the frame to which i refer is a very thin additional layer of steel beneath the downtube rather than anything substantial.
I don't think that whether gusseting is retro is a big question, i hardly think it's a question at all.