I was feeling pretty confident that is an S&S Newport. Looking at the frame details (chainguards, how the rear ends look), I think it could be S&S frame, but TBC (Taiwan Bike Co; I've seen folks refer to the firm as TBS as well...) made some really convincing clones. Some internet sources claim that the TBC guys made the Newport for S&S under contract, and then kept going with the TBC Islander bike after S&S folded. http://bmxmuseum.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=490486
FWIW, S&S frames are worth a pretty penny. The Taiwanese bikes, not so much... I'm no expert, but it looks to me like the S&S bikes (both the newport and the rainbow) have curved seat- and chainstays, whereas the TBC bikes have straight stays. The stays on the bike from the OP look straight as an arrow, to me.....So, i dunno. Toss that thing on the museum; those guys will tell you exactly what it is, then they'll tell you it sucks, and then they'll argue about the diffrent ways it sucks....but at least you'll get a solid ID on the frame. =D
Cool bike, either way.... How are you gonna build it, @||TheDude|| ?
Awesome information really. I would hesitate to call it a TBS because if you know Clayton at Emory you know his distaste for Asian made bikes. There's nothing made in Asia in his factory. Because of the Emory - Webco connection I wonder if this frame came through with part of that deal. There were probably about 20 of these frames in the factory all in this same state. Were there ever any connections between Webco and S&S or Webco and TBS?
hold up, wait.... just reread your post....there are twenty of these frames at the Emory factory?!?! THAT's pretty interesting, and kinda shoots my "Clayton doesn't know what that frame is, or where it comes from" theory.... hmmmmmm. Gotta get googling.
sounds hott. love grabber blue. What kinda brake, like a 1080 kinda thing?
Enter your email address to join: