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[Closed] Bike or bike bits that should have been buried at birth

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The SID XL.
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The Bianchi Super G (Coincidentally, also featuring SID XLs)
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This one was pretty much buried at birth, the Alchemist.
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This.
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Carry on.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:24 pm
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Anything with 'Crank Bros' printed on it? (see also E13 or Evil).

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:28 pm
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This made me want to vomit.. It came after the sublime Attitude too.. W.T.A.F..

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:31 pm
 irvb
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The downtube - full suspension folding bike.

As an aside, I have one in my garage that I am willing to sell to the highest bidder.

[img] ?1446293512[/img]

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:39 pm
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[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:39 pm
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irvb - Member
The downtube - full suspension folding bike.

As an aside, I have one in my garage that I am willing to sell to the highest bidder.

You'd have to be high...

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:40 pm
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😆 and 😳 at the visor - I made one pretty much identical to that. So much better than gegs. I've bought a "proper" one now

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:42 pm
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Trek press fit bb's.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:43 pm
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Any GT LTS.

From a company that had a pretty good rep' at making lookers, these should have been given the coat hanger treatment after conception.

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:43 pm
 irvb
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Teethgrinder - it makes the Klein Mantra above it look elegant 🙂

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:44 pm
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This. Only it wasn't born, it burst out of another bike's chest, xenomorph style...

[img] ?1342827223[/img]

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:46 pm
 irvb
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Oh dear. I've got a GT LTS in the garage as well (or is it an RTS?).

Again... will sell to the highest bidder.

Both bikes belonged to my dad - a man of style and taste, except when it came to bicycles.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:46 pm
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Muddy fox's 1995 attempt at full suspension:
[img] [/img]
One shock which the fork and rear suspension were linked too. Didn't work at all and to top it off, was horrendously expensive. I don't think they sold many (if any) as there is very limited info on them now.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:51 pm
 irvb
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I'm doing really well here. I have a Trek with a press fit BB also.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 8:51 pm
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Plastic brake levers.

Ridiculously short seat posts on children's BSO's that mean when you take your son and his mate out for (their first in the case of the friend) proper bike ride the poor friend has zero flipping hope of pedalling up a hill comfortably.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 9:40 pm
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[img] [/img]

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Posted : 04/06/2016 9:40 pm
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These tyres aswell, although they seem to be back in fashion now.....

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 9:42 pm
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Yee gods, the stem on that Klein is almost as long as the top tube.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 9:49 pm
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Zyzxx forks. End of thread.
https://dirtmountainbike.com/bike-reviews/handlebars-saddles/the-15-worst-mountain-bike-products-ever.html/5

(FWIW, I have a Mantra. Limited and fugly but actually nothing like as bad as people think. Most of the time - riding off a step is scary as it pogos up and kicks you in the arse)

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 10:01 pm
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The Raleigh Activator!

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 10:32 pm
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The GT RTS mentioned above was actually a looker and a trail blazer.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 10:51 pm
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There's things in here that I love, though admittedly maybe only because I never used them and never will.

 
Posted : 04/06/2016 11:11 pm
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Front mechs

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 12:01 am
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Re Klein Mantra - unbelievably Klein made a rigid version called a Karma Pave - - there is a shop that still has one for sale - reduced from $7999 to only S1699
http://budgetbicyclectr.com/1999-klein-karma-pave-bicycle.html

It's not a looker.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 2:47 am
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That GT looks awesome.

[img] [/img]

Nothing about these were good. I still have scar tissue on my ball-sack having shifted when meaning to brake and smashing them on the stem.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 4:40 am
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I'll also add this.. Ok, so not quite on the Mantra scale of Vom but I bought one of these with a grin wider than the Cookie Monster upon finding the McVities factory.

I rode the C2C (old Mtb route) with two mates, and I got off it at the end and vowed I'd never ever ride suspension again (and never have) luckily I got my mate drunk (very) and sold it to him whilst sitting in the Delaval Arms in Whitley Bay having finished the ride.

Bloody shite on many levels.

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:51 am
 nuke
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These...
[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 7:03 am
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[img] [/img]

I steered right, the front wheel went wherever it fancied at the time.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 7:24 am
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Slept on it; these aswell

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Posted : 05/06/2016 7:24 am
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Nominated because of the pain it dished out to my ar*e for three months until I finally bought a different saddle...

[img] http://www.retrobike.co.uk/forum/download/file.php?id=212268&t=1 [/img]

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 7:27 am
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matt_outandabout - Member
Nominated because of the pain it dished out to my ar*e for three months until I finally bought a different saddle...

I had the red one on my 1999 Clockwork for year! Went onto my P7 after that. It finally wore way about 2010.

Cheers, Steve

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 7:57 am
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Bullet - Member
The Raleigh Activator!

That was my first mtb! A little heavy and not convinced the suspension actually did anything. Got it nicked off me along with my dad's Raleigh Amazon (which my mate borrowed off him) when we got mugged by some bigger boys.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 8:04 am
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Square taper bottom brackets are the most wretched cycling object ever.

I still have scar tissue on my ball-sack having shifted when meaning to brake and smashing them on the stem

You brake with your ball-sack?! Kudos, that's nuts

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 8:19 am
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That visor in the OP 😯 . Taking a "header" could make a right mess of your face.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 8:23 am
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Square taper bottom brackets are the most wretched cycling object ever.

Yeah bloody components that last for ever.

I have a 1973 lambert road frame and death fork. Now there is a bike that probably should have been put in a sack and chucked in the river.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 8:34 am
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What's wrong with the crud claw, square taper or front mechs?

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 8:42 am
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The square taper crank only exists in 3 different states
1. Seized in place for ever and silent
2. Creaky
3. Works loose once, throw crank in bin.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 9:21 am
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If we had got rid of front mechs years ago gear tech would have advanced a lot faster.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 9:24 am
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Specialized Cobble Gobbler seatpost.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 10:03 am
 DezB
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If there had been no front mech in 2006, I might've kept my Dual Control... the rear was good.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 10:14 am
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The square taper crank only exists in 3 different states
1. Seized in place for ever and silent
2. Creaky
3. Works loose once, throw crank in bin.

😆 Not a chance! Square tapers work wonderfully, every 'upgrade' of the bottom bracket since has been worse.

I've never had one seize, external cups more than a few.
I've never had one creaky
I have had one come loose on the taper but I've seen more problems with thru axle.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 10:22 am
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The square taper crank only exists in 3 different states
1. Seized in place for ever and silent
2. Creaky
3. Works loose once, throw crank in bin.

I assume you have not spent time with cotter pin cranks and cup and lock-ring BB's.
Shirley, you would realise these are just small trifles due to operator error.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 10:27 am
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40 tooth cassette extensions should get in the sea. Daft things for the vain.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 10:30 am
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Agree, 40t is pretty pointless, 42 gives better results and costs the same.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 12:11 pm
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And fits better on my xt cranks 4 arm spider 😉

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 12:13 pm
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1*.

Fine if you're fit, rich and live somewhere flattish.

Pointless toss otherwise.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 12:15 pm
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Internal spoke nipples

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 12:19 pm
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The Raleigh Activator!

Oi!

Erm.. Yeah OK. I had one and it was proper shit.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 12:26 pm
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neilwheel - Member
The square taper crank only exists in 3 different states
1. Seized in place for ever and silent
2. Creaky
3. Works loose once, throw crank in bin.
I assume you have not spent time with cotter pin cranks and cup and lock-ring BB's.
Shirley, you would realise these are just small trifles due to operator error.

Yep I have messed about with cotter pins etc and they are the work of satan, however I'm happy the square taper has gone. Prime example a couple of years ago, tried a mates bike and noticed the bushings were shot. Told mate, "yeah can't change the lower bushing as the threads pulled out on the crank and I don't want to destroy my expensive cranks"

Bottom bracket was fine though.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 1:51 pm
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Square tapers are fine. A good in allied with a Middleburn crankset is a thing of engineering magnificence.
I also loved my USE SUB fork (until I broke it 🙁 )

Now, Zoom seatposts....looked nice, but were impossible to tighten and bent when you sat on them a bit too hard!

[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 2:26 pm
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trail_rat - Member
40 tooth cassette extensions should get in the sea. Daft things for the vain.

Yes, they look bloody stupid and probably weight more than a double with a normal size cassette. Same with those 32t cassettes and long cage mechs on a road bike; urgh.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 2:40 pm
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davidtaylforth - Member

probably weight more than a double with a normal size cassette.

Nope. But, no wronger than the other comments.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 3:06 pm
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[quote=slimjim78 ]I'm happy the square taper has gone. Prime example a couple of years ago, tried a mates bike and noticed the bushings were shot. Told mate, "yeah can't change the lower bushing as the threads pulled out on the crank and I don't want to destroy my expensive cranks"
Bottom bracket was fine though.

We still seem to be stuck on operator error as the problem with ST. I presume nobody has ever knackered an external bearing crankset through dodgy spannering? No, I can't recall ever seeing a thread complaining about that...

In any case it's an interesting one to put in a thread about things that should have been "buried at birth" - I presume you missed the point of the comment about cotter pins?

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 5:07 pm
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Square taper had that one terrible flaw- the BBs lasted so long that often by the time you wanted to change one, it'd seized solidly into the frame. Not a problem you're ever likely to have with a modern pushfit on a 30mm axle.

But it's dead on performance bikes for several good reasons, and hangs around on low performance bikes for other good reasons. It's just a shame it's got harder to find really good BBs, and so many modern ST cranks and BBs are basically junk.

(must admit, my Dune came with one and I quickly destroyed a crank arm just by forgetting to properly torque it up... Funny how quick you forget these things)

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 5:12 pm
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40 tooth cassette extensions should get in the sea. Daft things for the vain.

Yes, they look bloody stupid and probably weight more than a double with a normal size cassette.

I'm pretty sure my 40t extender weighs a lot less than a 22t chainring and bolts, front mech, front shifter and associated cables.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 5:14 pm
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This thread certainly demonstrates how cack handed the average MTBer (or STW contributor) actually is.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:01 pm
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It's a little unfair critiquing some of those early suspension designs too. I suspect a lot is viewed through 'modern' tinted glasses. At the time, nobody knew how to do bike suspension, and anything was better than nothing.

I recall my first RC35s with a whole 50mm of elastomer sprung travel with no damper, compression or rebound, being awesome. Yes, they're shit now, but at the time they were the danglies.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:18 pm
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Fair enough, square tapers being buried at birth or whatever is harsh, I was more answering the question as to what's wrong with them.
I have no problems with whatever the new style is called and have only needed to replace one in the last 3 years. Being able to easily remove and refit a chain set is a huge advantage on a full suss bike that gets used all year round.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:31 pm
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ISIS bottom brackets should have been buried at birth, fair enough they died in their infancy but it was still to long..

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:42 pm
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I'm pretty sure my 40t extender weighs a lot less than a 22t chainring and bolts, front mech, front shifter and associated cables.

You're probably right. But the weight of the embarrassment you're carrying around outweighs everything.

MTBing's not meant to be easy; grow some leg strength. What next, 160mm of front and rear travel for riding round a trail centre? You may aswell just sit at home on the settee.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:42 pm
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Huge fan of 1x drivetrains and 40t expanders - better than chainsuck hell!

Square taper cranks - when BBs lasted 15 years and didn't require stripping and repacking every month in winter. If they're so flexy how come JIS track cranks are still made with square taper BBs?

Buried at birth? BB30 on MTBs - bearings pressed directly into BB shell that filled with water in the wet and bearing life measured in hours.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:44 pm
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khani - Member

ISIS bottom brackets should have been buried at birth, fair enough they died in their infancy but it was still to long..

What were isis and isoflow actually all about? Was it supposed to be a better interface or something? I wasn't riding when they came along so I missed it but the best you could say about them, it seemed, was "Just like square taper, only worse".

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:45 pm
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I gave a Trek Y3 with "long travel" RS Indy's (63mm) to an aging uncle. He loves it, a mercedes of bikes as he puts it.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:47 pm
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Trek push fit bb thirded. Lots of dubious designs from back in the day, but from a big brand 20 years on.... took one brand new set of bearings on the welsh c2c, they were screwed before the ends, contacted trek and told them my legs last longer than your bike, for a while after they replaced f.o.c. see they've quietly replaced now with bb92

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:57 pm
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davidtaylforth:

You're probably right.

No, I *am* right.

But the weight of the embarrassment you're carrying around outweighs everything.

Again, embarrassment doesn't actually weigh anything, so I think you're wrong on that count as well.

MTBing's not meant to be easy; grow some leg strength.

Right, so not allowed gears any more? I like being able to get up steep stuff without having to get off and push. Am I wrong because of that?

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 6:59 pm
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Stop feeding the troll...

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 7:16 pm
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Right, so not allowed gears any more? I like being able to get up steep stuff without having to get off and push. Am I wrong because of that?

Do whatever makes you happy, that's the best bet. THere's no denying big cassettes look stupid, if nothing else.

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 7:17 pm
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What's this chainsuck ?

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 10:00 pm
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What were isis and isoflow actually all about?

Well the flaw in square taper was that if they came slightly loose you'd toast your cranks before you did the BB in. That meant that if it did happen, it was a big bill. ST was good though, I have an early 90s Yeti in the garage still on its original Middleburn/Royce combo. ISIS was basically the first stab at something like hollowtech2. It was a bigger axle with splines to create a better interface with the cranks, which would in theory make it lighter, stiffer and stronger. Problem was some genius forgot that in order to get the bearings [i]inside[/i] the shell of the BB as they were then, you'd need to use bearings so small they could measure their lifespan in a BB in hours. It was a total nonsense. That said, it did spawn octalink (or maybe octaink spawned ISIS?), which spawned Hollowtech and eventually HT2, which is a pretty good system IMHO. Got to start somewhere!

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 11:30 pm
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[quote=trail_rat ]What's this chainsuck ?
Something experienced by people that can't set up a front mech?

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 11:51 pm
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Something experienced by people that can't set up a front mech

Saucer of milk with that?

 
Posted : 05/06/2016 11:53 pm
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instead of posting each and every photo again:

"post the ugliest DH-bikes of the world":
http://www.mtb-news.de/forum/t/zeigt-her-die-haesslichsten-dh-bikes-der-welt.590571/

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 2:45 am
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Something experienced by people that can't set up a front mech

der, chainsuck isn't caused by the front mech setup.. it's caused by the big(ger) ring not releasing the chain due to a sticky tooth.

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 6:06 am
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Orange Sub Five. Bloody awful

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 6:10 am
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Buried at birth? BB30 on MTBs - bearings pressed directly into BB shell that filled with water in the wet and bearing life measured in hours.

This. I had an alloy Flash which I really liked, but a BB should last more than three rides.

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 6:37 am
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Anything with a 'unified rear triangle'. Along with the SID I'd chuck the Judy XL in with this list too.

I would reluctantly dispute the GT LTS - but only once you'd binned the aforementioned Judy XL. Feeling a bit embarrassed about the stem length but gonna post this anyway 😛 :

[IMG] [/IMG]

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 7:54 am
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a bit embarrassed about the stem length but gonna post this anyway

You should be more embarrassed by the tyres, though they're a worthy addition to this thread in themselves (I agree about the LTS being quite good though, especially with a nice Bomber on the front).

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 8:08 am
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Agree that the LTS should be given a pass, the low cost versions were a bit uneasy on the eye but by and large a good looking bike. I believe Jeff Jones worked on the development of the LTS.

As for stem length, I happened upon an old thread of a bike I was putting together and commented on not liking the stubby stem (it was a 70mm). How times have changed!

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 8:19 am
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ISIS bottom brackets for me also, the worst piece of kit ever. I once got around 73 miles out of a FSA one which was only ever ridden in the dry!!!

Giant NRS it put me off riding mtbs for years. I know other people got on with them but I just hated mine.

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 8:33 am
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Another vote for ISIS BB's - utter poo. Shimano Octalink was pretty good though.

I quite liked the LTS back in the day. I like ibeam posts and saddles too!

The Orange X1 was a dire bike as was the Mr O...what were they thinking?

RS Indy's were awful. The Judy's were only marginally better.

 
Posted : 06/06/2016 8:42 am
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