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Evil?

invol2ver

Chimp
Aug 23, 2010
65
0
the company blows bottom line. if they wanted to salvage a little respect they could at least keep people updated with whats going on. instead they just left everyone with a big f you
 

dump

Turbo Monkey
Oct 12, 2001
8,213
4,463
Nowadays it's companies mentioned by IH8Rice, but:
Who made Imperials and who made plastic bashguards? Evil.
The old Evil (the makers of the imperial) did also produce products as e13. Evil got sold off and is run on the west coast now. e13 continued for a while but sold recently to The Hive who still sells things as e13. Needless to say, it's not the same guys running the show on either front.
 

zdubyadubya

Turbo Monkey
Apr 13, 2008
1,273
96
Ellicott City, MD
Maybe this is some lost in translation thing going on, I give up.
I'll try for ya. He is saying to salvage their reputation, Evil should transform back into the company of old. Simple products that just work. New Evil should = Old Evil. Everybody knows that new Evil sucks and has nothing to do with the Evil that made imperials and started the poly bashguard revolution. Buuuut, to salvage the new company it must return to its roots.
 

IH8Rice

I'm Mr. Negative! I Fail!
Aug 2, 2008
24,524
494
Im over here now
Nowadays it's companies mentioned by IH8Rice, but:
Who made Imperials and who made plastic bashguards? Evil.
yes. at that time Imperials and the plastic guards/chain guides were under the "Evil" name. but the Revolt was made by the "new" Evil bikes and the current E13 company has nothing to do with the bike company. they still make those poly carbonate bash guards though
get it?

The old Evil (the makers of the imperial) did also produce products as e13. Evil got sold off and is run on the west coast now. e13 continued for a while but sold recently to The Hive who still sells things as e13. Needless to say, it's not the same guys running the show on either front.
the chainguides were first produced under the Evil name along with their bikes. the E13 came later on (after the bikes and chainguides split IIRC)
 
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Verskis

Monkey
May 14, 2010
458
8
Tampere, Finland
yes. at that time Imperials and the plastic guards/chain guides were under the "Evil" name. but the Revolt was made by the "new" Evil bikes and the current E13 company has nothing to do with the bike company.
get it?
Alright, I'm the stupid one, I thought you meant that the Imperial frames and plastic bashguards were made by two different companies called Evil, didn't realize you talked about the new and old Evil.
 

spam16v

Monkey
Oct 27, 2004
284
0
Buffalo, NY
wow, you guys missed the boat... no sh*t E.13 and Evil split, that was the point of the joke :facepalm: Not to mention it was years ago, before some people here were even riding w/o training wheels.
 

IH8Rice

I'm Mr. Negative! I Fail!
Aug 2, 2008
24,524
494
Im over here now
wow, you guys missed the boat... no sh*t E.13 and Evil split, that was the point of the joke :facepalm: Not to mention it was years ago, before some people here were even riding w/o training wheels.
if that was a joke, then you must write for Gallagher cause it wasnt funny. :rolleyes:
 

dropmachine

Turbo Monkey
Sep 7, 2001
2,922
10
Your face.
Why anybody would give a crap about this company blows my mind.

They might have had the best of intentions with the company, and it seems like they had some great people in it. I know they had a bunch of problems that were out of their hands (to a degree) but this lack of updates and stuff is horrible. From what I have heard they are still communicating with actual customers, but they've commited the biggest mistake they can marketwise by sstaying silent with no updates. It just looks bad. Its bad enough the frame cost what it did and died as it did, but this lack of update junk (for which there is ABSOLUTELY NO REASON) would be more than enough to make me as a consumer look at any of the other dozens of companies that make non-cracking bikes and communicate with their audience.
 

dump

Turbo Monkey
Oct 12, 2001
8,213
4,463
Why anybody would give a crap about this company blows my mind.
Can't speak for everyone, but I'm a bit nostaligic about Evil v1... in fact I still ride one :)
I know this company isn't the same guys, but it's unfortunate to see how things turned out. Still hoping they can salvage something.
 

haromtnbiker

Turbo Monkey
Oct 3, 2004
1,461
0
Cary, NC
Yep, here it is. My best use for my evil frame. Noise Maker at Nationals. Oh what a feeling to smash it on it for a while. Tired of the B.S. Ready for a new frame.

 

Sghost

Turbo Monkey
Jul 13, 2008
1,038
0
NY
Evil should put themselves into the black by licensing e13 nostalgia bashguards :D
 

Bikael Molton

goofy for life
Jun 9, 2003
4,022
1,154
El Lay
Having watched the first Evil and then the Evil of Ill Repute from the beginning, I find it so weird and counterintuitive that this brand, which appeared so savvy about internet marketing at the time of their initial launch and subsequent relaunch, never chose to:

1) Simply update their damn website with signs of life. Not doing so looks straight-up sketchy!

2) Use the online forums to market (and simply communicate) to the hardcore, big-spending consumers and tastemakers on RM and other forums like other much larger, faster-growing and more successful companies have done.
Turner Bikes, e13, Maxxis, Intense and many of the 29er wheel start-ups have used RM and MTBR to their advantage for research, marketing and general consumer good-will. Ridemonkey in particular was ripe for Evil to engage with their consumers, but instead there's been this aloof radio silence that has crossed the line into arrogance.


Basically, my opinion is this:
 
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Urinal Mint

Monkey
Oct 10, 2003
193
0
Washington
Evil is done. They ceased communication with their dealers and their customers, effectively screwing over anyone who will give them business. If, by some miracle, the Undead comes to light, they will immediately need to replace a whole sh*tload of broken Revolts, putting them even further into the hole. Those who believe this frame will actually be produced and in our hands by December are delirious. Hang the Revolt up, move on, and buy a new frame from a reputable company that will stand behind their product.
 

sethimus

neu bizutch
Feb 5, 2006
4,960
2,178
not in Whistler anymore :/
aye, small claims before they declare bankruptcy. You can probably squeeze out enough cash of them to buy a replacement frame, though maybe not the full amount you paid. They can't survive forever, sponsoring a race team but selling no products.... ???? You may have to travel though to do a successful claim, not sure how that works.
ms claims in the interview above that he paid most of the bills for the team by himself.

try translating this site:

http://www.nyx.at/bikeboard/Board/showthread.php?154159-Markus-Stoeckl

most infos should be there too.
 

EVIL JN

Monkey
Jul 24, 2009
491
24
That's something i hardly would expect at rampage even. At 1.02 its quite close to the cliff edge.