Great thread with replies essentially falling into two camps based on whether importance is interpreted 'personal' or 'historic'. I can read an historic list in lots of places but for me ther personal lists and rationale are much more interesting (note: this is not so I can produce my own ego-centric list. Well, not entirely).
A list of mountainbikes important to me would include:
- Marin Palisades. My first mountainbike. My first new bike. Fluro forks and Mountain LX. I thought I was so cool and arguably, for 25 minutes, was so.
- Klein Attitude in green/white/magenta fade - the first bike I saw live that looked so different to everything else. Cannondale's had the fat tubes but it was the Klein fork and Mission Control bar/stem that really blew me away. Way, way cool.
- Fat Chance Yo Eddy in Grello. That retina burning paint. The graphics. The fork. The cost for a steel frame.
- Pace RC100. Saw one first in the freewheel catalogue and, like the Klein, it made my head spin. The tubes. The Bullseyes. The brakes. The stem. The Klein looked gorgeous with it's candy colours, like a made up Keira Knightley, but the Pace looked so functional, so Rachel Weicz.
- Stumpjumper Team. My first proper mountainbike. Saw me through the first Polaris. Sold. Resprayed. Bought back. So many memories.
- Klein Pinnacle. The bike I sold the Stumpjumper for. Built up with XC Pro and RC30s as the frame was so compliant I needed a stiff front end. Gorgeous almost liquid finish, like a supermodels nails.
- Roberts White Spider. Fabulous detail and lead me down the furrow I still plough today of convincing myself to buy bikes that are clearly too small just because they are lovely.
- Orange P7. Always wanted one. Got one off eBay to turn into an ss. Looking for parts lead me to Retrobike. This frame has a lot to answer for.
So only a Top 8, and in no particular order, but all have resonance whether it is evoking memories, fuelling the fire or just making me feel a bit wistful.
As a footnote, for those on the historic tip, and I know they aren't mountainbikes, but where do the bikes ridden by the Velo Cross Club in France and the Rough Stuff Fellowship fit in?