The yearly Sea Otter is where the cycling world unveils the new and the nearly-new (and the not-quite-yet too) but there were several exhibits that were, or recalled, the past of our sport. And it’s not just bikes – there were some of the original characters of the sport, from the ever-present characters of Gary Fisher, Tom Ritchey, Joe Murray, Scot Nicol and Joe Breeze walking the paddock, to the re-emergence of Chris Chance, there were plenty of chances to see some legends.
So, join us as we take in some of the sights…
Like, totally crucial, dude! This fella was jiving on the Fox Racing Shox booth, giving out love and high-fives.The original fat bike
Even the most retro of us, couldn’t remember this one
No laughing, junior, this was state of the art! Look at those Mag 21s! And the bar ends.
Another idea that seemed to make amazing sense at the time. The Marin Ti FRS
We can still spot a Ground Control tyre at 30 paces
Gary Fisher was looking dapper as ever, while recording for the Spokesmen podcast with Chipps.
Chris Chance has been away for a decade, but he’s decidedly back.
Sid to Sid. Even when inflated, the ’98 SID only had 63mm travel, half of the modern one.
Likewise the original RS-1. 52mm compared to 100mm of the modern upsidedown RS-1.
Keith Bontrager developed the original crown for Paul Turner’s fork. Love those decals!
Some folks here will be drooling at this immaculate Yeti Ultimate. Ooh, those stays. Nurse!
And a carbon Trimble from 1993. Just wow!
Magura cycling is 40 years old, so it bought a ’75 Cadillac with original interior.Cyclocross isn’t all carbon frames and Di2 you know. This was being ridden around.
Aero stormtooper look from this bang up to date Kask helmet. For what, we don’t know.Half BMX, half riot Police…
With 23 years as Editor of Singletrack World Magazine, Chipps is the longest-running mountain bike magazine editor in the world. He started in the bike trade in 1990 and became a full time mountain bike journalist at the start of 1994. Over the last 30 years as a bike writer and photographer, he has seen mountain bike culture flourish, strengthen and diversify and bike technology go from rigid steel frames to fully suspended carbon fibre (and sometimes back to rigid steel as well.)
13 thoughts on “Sea Otter: Old School and Retro Bikes at the Otter”
I miss bar ends. There, I said it.
The diameter of handlebar ends hasn’t changed, you can still rock them if you want. No one’s stopping you. 🙂
I still use bar ends…
Some great stuff in there. Seems like yesterday!
I still have 63mm SIDs on one bike.
😆 at Maguras car.
Not liking the fake Tioga Disk Drive spoke covers on the Trimble. 🙁
Do they serve Lamb Bhunas from that car?
Fake spoke covers, tthew?
No one’s mentioned the ice-spiked Porcupines though 🙂
“Fake spoke covers, tthew?”
I can see a gap between the disk and the rim, and what look like metal spokes. If I’m wrong, what I meant to say was,
Liking the Tioga Disk Drive wheel on the Trimble! 🙂
Back in the day my LBS had an alloy Marin FRS, making me feel old chaps 😉
Nothing rusts out there!
“I can see a gap between the disk and the rim, and what look like metal spokes.” The Kevlar elements all attached to metal circles with stub spokes sticking out of them, that was how they were attached to the rim, tensioned and trued.
I miss bar ends. There, I said it.
The diameter of handlebar ends hasn’t changed, you can still rock them if you want. No one’s stopping you. 🙂
I still use bar ends…
Some great stuff in there. Seems like yesterday!
I still have 63mm SIDs on one bike.
😆 at Maguras car.
Not liking the fake Tioga Disk Drive spoke covers on the Trimble. 🙁
Do they serve Lamb Bhunas from that car?
Fake spoke covers, tthew?
No one’s mentioned the ice-spiked Porcupines though 🙂
“Fake spoke covers, tthew?”
I can see a gap between the disk and the rim, and what look like metal spokes. If I’m wrong, what I meant to say was,
Liking the Tioga Disk Drive wheel on the Trimble! 🙂
Back in the day my LBS had an alloy Marin FRS, making me feel old chaps 😉
Nothing rusts out there!
“I can see a gap between the disk and the rim, and what look like metal spokes.” The Kevlar elements all attached to metal circles with stub spokes sticking out of them, that was how they were attached to the rim, tensioned and trued.