he's had a custom rize at sea mammal. I would not be surprised if a rize x was to appear shortlyI wonder what Chris Van Dine will ride if this is true.
he's had a custom rize at sea mammal. I would not be surprised if a rize x was to appear shortlyI wonder what Chris Van Dine will ride if this is true.
confused... is this your (green) bike that's been repainted or some other bike?Oh, it's the medium after some new paint.
A lot of C'dale's carbon fiber bikes have been made overseas for a while. One of the resins they use for the bikes, well, they couldn't legally use the amount required to manufacture frames here in the US.Van Dine is tearing up the trails on a plastic fiber GT DHI. I'm guessing that they're pushing GT as gnarly long travel and C dale is going XC/road. Glad they didn't just toss him. With the closure of C dale's US plant, and XC/road going plastic, made in asia it makes perfect sense. I never really liked anything C Dale made but i had respect for them as being the largerst USA mfgr.
What will happen to Doug Dalton, isn't he their suspension engineer? and sounds like cannondale will make nothing according to this.Van Dine is tearing up the trails on a plastic fiber GT DHI. I'm guessing that they're pushing GT as gnarly long travel and C dale is going XC/road. Glad they didn't just toss him. With the closure of C dale's US plant, and XC/road going plastic, made in asia it makes perfect sense. I never really liked anything C Dale made but i had respect for them as being the largerst USA mfgr.
They bought it at a bankruptcy auction. There is no debt for the buyer. The proceeds from the auction will go to the secured debtors and then the unsecured.But I'm not sure how you can buy a company with no assets, loads of debt, and a diminishing reputation.
Cool. Good to hear he has a ride. Tell him Ben in Switzerland says hey if you see him.Van Dine is tearing up the trails on a plastic fiber GT DHI. I'm guessing that they're pushing GT as gnarly long travel and C dale is going XC/road. Glad they didn't just toss him. With the closure of C dale's US plant, and XC/road going plastic, made in asia it makes perfect sense. I never really liked anything C Dale made but i had respect for them as being the largerst USA mfgr.
IH was licensing the DW-link from Dave, as he is the patent holder. Their license has expired, they can no longer manufacture DW link frames. That is, unless they somehow convince him to re-license, but I highly doubt that. From what I've heard Dave has been having a great experience with Turner.DW, correct me if I am wrong... But can Dorel take the Iron Horse brand oversea's with the DW link???
Could Iron Horse become strictly a European brand because they can use the DW link anywhere but in the US???
I hope I am wrong and they cannot use it anywhere, at least I hope for Dave's sake.
I think it could be good for current Sunday owners if they make parts available for purchase, I would not expect any warranty to be honored by Dorel.
IH was licensing the DW-link from Dave, as he is the patent holder. Their license has expired, they can no longer manufacture DW link frames. That is, unless they somehow convince him to re-license, but I highly doubt that. From what I've heard Dave has been having a great experience with Turner.
Not sure about DW's patent, I know its US, not sure about other countries. Hopefully Dave can field that answer. Specialized's FSR/Horst patent is US only, hence all the overseas clones.You use the word Patent, isn't it a US patent?? Look how many horst link bikes are overseas.
I wonder if Dorel even looked at that. IH was not much of a company until DW got involved, before that they were just another bike manufacture that made mediocre bikes. The majority of their recent growth (last 4 years) was because of the Dave Weagle fan club.Iron Horse is not Dave Weigle. If Dorel wanted his services and designs, they should have negotiated with him directly.
Buick and Saab are not going away btw.Is Dorel the General Motors of the bike industry. Most of there companies (Pontiac, Buick, Oldsmobile, Saab) were stand alone companies that did not make it and were taken over by GM, look where they are now, do I smell a bail out for Dorel in the future??
Never said they were going anywhere. Just examples of some of the companies they acquired over the years. Much like Dorel.Buick and Saab are not going away btw.
Who the hell is this Weigle guy and how come I never heard of him!!?Dave Weigle fan club.
dw-link has actually been granted patent in Europe and has issued / will be issuing in a lot of countries very soon. There are also patents granted in Australia, New Zealand, China, and Canada. Really, there is more coverage for the dw-link suspension system than any other.You use the word Patent, isn't it a US patent?? Look how many horst link bikes are overseas.
Weigle, Weagle, I have no F'n clue, from what I hear it's some guy who thinks he knows something about suspension design.Who the hell is this *Weagle* (edit version) guy and how come I never heard of him!!?
Don't forget to credit Todd S for turning their MTB line into legitimate products and sponsoring a team to prove it.The majority of their recent growth (last 4 years) was because of the Dave Weagle fan club.
Buick should go away though. WTF is a buick? Over-weight, ill-handling, different crap on the same chassi (=same crap), etc. Retired baby-boomers buy em, but those people are dying off, just like GM. What is popular? The milan/CTS sized-cars with real nice room front and back, without being boats with wheels. They should have invested in cars like that a long time ago, but detroit was content to sell "oldsmobiles" and "buicks".Buick and Saab are not going away btw.