I love vintage mountain bikes and how they can trace their lineage to the bikes we all love and discuss here. What an incredible application of technology and ingenuity that created an entirely new way to enjoy cycling. As I am writing this, I am watching Klunkerz, the prices documentary about the early days of mountain biking.
As a little perspective, I am a young guy, not even born when a bunch of hippies started blasting down Mount Tam is Marin County. I have an eye for beautifully designed machinery and the early mountain bikes caught my eye as soon as I learned about them. For a long time, I have admired the early mountain bikes. I wanted to pick up one of the early Breezer, Ritchey, WTB, etc bikes, but they were too expensive even 5-10 years ago. I set my eyes on the Stumpjumper as it is iconic in that it can be credited (and it is despite some controversy) for bringing mountain biking into the mainstream. Even early Stumpjumpers were bringing decent money, so I I never had the chance to buy one until two days ago.
This popped up on CL and I recognized the ad being from a particular bike flipper I know. He was asking a very reasonable price, so I jumped on it. When I went to look at the bike, I asked where he got it, already knowing he probably found it at Goodwill. He did and paid something less than $60 for it. Its in really good shape, just a few scratches, and all the polished alloy parts look brand new. It is very low mileage and original except the tires. I'll be looking for some suitable, somewhat period-correct skin-wall tires to make it really look right.
As a little perspective, I am a young guy, not even born when a bunch of hippies started blasting down Mount Tam is Marin County. I have an eye for beautifully designed machinery and the early mountain bikes caught my eye as soon as I learned about them. For a long time, I have admired the early mountain bikes. I wanted to pick up one of the early Breezer, Ritchey, WTB, etc bikes, but they were too expensive even 5-10 years ago. I set my eyes on the Stumpjumper as it is iconic in that it can be credited (and it is despite some controversy) for bringing mountain biking into the mainstream. Even early Stumpjumpers were bringing decent money, so I I never had the chance to buy one until two days ago.
This popped up on CL and I recognized the ad being from a particular bike flipper I know. He was asking a very reasonable price, so I jumped on it. When I went to look at the bike, I asked where he got it, already knowing he probably found it at Goodwill. He did and paid something less than $60 for it. Its in really good shape, just a few scratches, and all the polished alloy parts look brand new. It is very low mileage and original except the tires. I'll be looking for some suitable, somewhat period-correct skin-wall tires to make it really look right.