Marin-Team-Issue

Re: Marin Team

BlackCat":1ak5no0m said:
I think the NOS Marin that you saw, Haggis, a few months ago was a Team Marin, not a Team Issue, and it was a 1996 in 18".

It went for £103 for F&F, so a starting bid of £130 for that 1993 Team Issue is pretty toppy imo, although it is gorgeous. If it was my size I'd definitely be in the running. As it is, I've dedicated all my time in the last few days to convincing the other half that she needs some retro in her life too.

Hasn't worked though :evil:

wasn't the only diff between the team marin and team issue the componentry? Think your right though, it was a '96 f+f, just got the last 2 digits mixed up
 
Marin team

Agreed, I wouldn't lose a minute of sleep paying £130 for that. S'pose we should count ourselves lucky it's too small - could get quite competitive!
 
Have to admit that if it had upper rack eyes to complement the 'grd eyes I might well be in for it.

My sealed envelope says it'll do a ton and a half max (but then I'm pretty new to mtb stuff).
 
Re: Marin Team

haggis":4kmmwxf6 said:
wasn't the only diff between the team marin and team issue the componentry?
It varied from year to year, but the Team Issue quite often had a higher-level frame than the Team Marin. This is full Tange Ultimate Superlight, the lightest tubeset in the Tange range.
 
How light is it? And how light were you expecting it to be?

he's quoted me 3080g all in, so probbaly no less than 1.9kg, i was hoping around 1.7 looking at teh superight tube spec and size of the frame. dunno, could be the stem is a monster or something.
 
I agree that it's most likely 1.9 out of 3.08kg, but I wouldn't be disappointed with 1.9 - that's as light as Tange Prestige (or any other 8-5-8 based tubeset) gets.

I did once see a picture of a Ritchey race team frame on a scale at 1.74 or something like that. That's what the tubes weigh, but you do need the odd little luxury like paint, welds, dropouts, bridges etc, so how could a frame weigh that? Well, excluding the possibility that his scale was way out, he did say that he had seen one of those frames broken in a race and Tom Ritchey had said 'oh well, they're only designed to last a season and at least that one got most of the way there'.

That made me wonder whether TR made his real team frames with some road tubes that Tange wouldn't sanction for mtb use. Just speculation, but that would be consistent with his remark. If he had used sanctioned mtb tubes, he would expect them to withstand xc racing stresses pretty much forever, not just one season.

Even then, I'd be slightly surprised that the team riders wanted a frame as light as that. They'd surely want mtb stays to get the power down, and I guess the argument for a front triangle made of road tubes was based on needing compliance in an era of rigid forks. Once suspension came in, there was no argument for racing with a frame as flexy as that. e.g., the Kona King Kahuna was developed partly so the race team could use it in preference to the lighter but (at least in their hands) slower Hei Hei.
 
yup 1.9 is not bad for prestige, the frame im using now is that. only other frame i know made of superlight is a voodoo bizango, which i think was around 1750g for that size, so seemed a reasonable hope. ive seen quite alot of steel frames around the 1750 mark, mostly columbus nivacrome tubes and hand made, but the bontranger racelite was true temper 4130, so im taking that as a the benchmark for a lightweight steel frame 8) im a bit wierd tho cos i probably carry my bike half the time i use it. ritchey p20 or a plexus is what i really want but a bit out of my price range.
 
Back
Top