Forum menu
Bike retail prices ...
 

[Closed] Bike retail prices in the 90s

Posts: 6809
Full Member
 

My first ever MTB was a Raleigh Mirage, early-mid 90s, was about £400 from memory. Very special looking purple bike that

One for sale on retrobike. 😉

Not connected to me btw.


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 9:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Why don't you go on retrobike and sell your 3 bikes to someone who will use them instead of moaning about them.the ti might be worth alot.


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 9:47 pm
Posts: 4468
Full Member
 

My 1st bike was a Diamond Back Topanga which was £320 in '91

2nd was an Orange Clockwork LX with DX Shifter upgrade which was £540 in '92, that got stolen so...

3rd was a '92? Team Marin, Zolatone and Pink with full XT, bought for £650 in end of season sale, it rode like absolute shit, is still the worst bike I've even ridden, I suspected the frame wasn't straight as always wanted to turn left. eventually got fed up with it and stripped it, sold the frame and bought...

A Fat Chance Wicked frame for £500 in very bright Orange paint. I loved that bike and upgraded the hell out of it over a couple of years with cash from my summer job. When that got stolen at the NEMBA race in Guisborough, I put a deposit down on a DBR Axis Team Titanium frame that morning as BikeScene had a clearance one on their stand, it was £650.

I rode that bike for 5 years, wish I'd still got it.


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 10:04 pm
Posts: 9231
Full Member
 

First ‘proper’ bike. Carrera Krakatoa 1989. £249.

Second ‘proper’ bike. Dawes One Track 1993. £230.

Third ‘proper’ bike. Kona CinderCone. £699.

Fourth ‘proper’ bike. Marin FRS Pro - Frame only. £650.


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 10:24 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I’m not moaning about them; just pointing out that they’re not very good by modern standards.

JP


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 11:05 pm
Posts: 3854
Full Member
 

Back early on the tread some posted up an early 90’s shop price list for Orange. My Aluminium O was Suntour XC pro, £1100. I still have the frame and I rode it for many years. Seriously stiff and probably more like a gravel bike geometry now but I did have lots of fun on it! The frame is still hanging up in my workshop


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 11:30 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Paul's cycles, Warminster cycles were both early pioneers of buying container loads of end of season models then punting them out at a discount... had many bikes from former over the years and a classic e stay alpinestars from warminster 91 maybe


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 11:36 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

GT Karakoram 1995 model, bought for £550 RRP £750

Range chromoly, decent Mavic rims and Deore LX throughout.

Wanted a Konus Kilauea or Explosif but these were £800-950 ish


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 11:46 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

How simple the options were back then!

Gripshift or rapid fire, Rockshox Quadra 21R or Marzocchis...

My mate had one of the first Hope mechanical disc brakes in 1995... oh how we turned green with envy!!!! He was 14/15 at the time!


 
Posted : 16/04/2020 11:56 pm
Posts: 6809
Full Member
 

Tbf you realistically picked between Pace, Rockshox or Manitou for your forks back then.

Now you pick between Fox and Rockshox.

There are other options, just as there was, but few pick them.


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 1:26 am
Posts: 168
Free Member
 

Tbf you realistically picked between Pace, Rockshox or Manitou for your forks back then.

When i got in to mountain biking, which was late 90's admittedly, Marzocchi were the forks to have!

I can't remember Pace being all that popular, since their prices started at £399 for the RC36, and then the Evo forks (with the gold stanchions) were another £100.

RST (do they still exist?) seemed very popular, think I recall the 281's were about £100 or just over. I never tried a pair that rode better than a rigid fork.


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 9:48 am
Posts: 1151
Free Member
 

I've still got my '94 Marin Indian Fire Trail. Bought 2nd hand at 6 months old for 750, I think they were 1100 new.


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 11:59 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Well done for keeping it


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 12:01 pm
 5lab
Posts: 7926
Free Member
 

I brought a top-of-the line orange MrXC XTRa in 1999 - the first of the '5 a like' designs they made. xtr, carbon forks, was £2700 which is £4700 today. The current orange 5 XTR is £6,300, so they've gone up in price a bit quicker


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 12:08 pm
Posts: 2647
Free Member
 

I remember Pace forks upgrading the rigid stanchion to suspension, at least £200. Go out on a cold day it felt like a rigid bike again the elastomers didn't like the cold


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 12:08 pm
Posts: 6990
Full Member
 

When i got in to mountain biking, which was late 90’s admittedly, Marzocchi were the forks to have!

They were definitely the first to realise that elastomers are a bit shit.


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 12:17 pm
Posts: 156
Free Member
 

Not a full bike but had a custom built frame made by Greg fuquay in 92/93 it was tange prestige,full custom with a gorgeous candy apple red paint job. It was absolutely stunning. If I remember correctly it cost me about £500 dread to think what it would cost today.


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 3:49 pm
Posts: 51
Free Member
 

Wow, you guys had some pretty posh bikes.

My first full size mountain bike was a Dawes Tracker (19") which I got for Christmas when I was 12 I think.  C.1990.  My friends had similar bikes (one had an Emmelle the other I forget which brand).  I remember the Shimano group sets on them all had names.  Shimano Exage Country was mine, the others I think were Trail and Mountain.

Around 1993 I bought my first mountain bike magazine (MBI), and on the lowly budget of a paper round began modding my Dawes.  Kept it for years and changed pretty much everything in it, frame was professionally resprayed Yeti green, even had a Synchros seat post and stem...on a Dawes!

No idea what my parents paid for that bike, but I certainly sunk a whole load more cash into it over a number of years after.


 
Posted : 17/04/2020 6:19 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

My Muddy Fox Courier was £300 new in 1991.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 10:15 am
Posts: 6809
Full Member
 

3rd was a ’92? Team Marin, Zolatone and Pink with full XT, bought for £650 in end of season sale, it rode like absolute shit, is still the worst bike I’ve even ridden, I suspected the frame wasn’t straight as always wanted to turn left. eventually got fed up with it and stripped it, sold the frame and bought…

Nerd alert... The Team was a 1990 or 91, light grey Zolatone 90, dark grey 91. Must have been something wrong with it as that era Marins rode well. Maybe a bit neutral but certainly nothing to dislike.

They were definitely the first to realise that elastomers are a bit shit.

Rockshox didn't use elastomers for years. The RS1, Mag 20, 21, etc were all air/oil. Think the Judy was their first elastomer fork? Elastomers were fine at the time, they just got taken over by technology. Marzocchi used air/oil from the start but the early forks were 'a bit shit' so everyone not on RS bought elastomer based Pace or Manitou. 😉


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 12:17 pm
Posts: 242
Free Member
 

I had a 1993 Saracen Andes special edition, which I think was £379. I still remember the feel and smell of it when opening the box for the first time (worked sort of in the trade so was shipped to me by colleagues).

My next bike was a 98 (I think) Scott Vail, which was about £500 and had a shit RS fork and V-brakes, and geometry that sure as hell encouraged me to go over the bars on descents (I was shit too). This was followed by a 2001 Scott Comp Racing at £779 with a much better fork and V's, that I put XT discs on and kept until a couple of years ago when I gave it to a mate who still uses it.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 12:17 pm
 hugo
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

You look at a well chosen 600 quid bike now and compare it to what was available for 300 quid 25 years ago (3% inflation) then it would be laughably better now.

Not even close.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 12:35 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Topic starter
 

I expected the original mtbs to be more expensive than they were.modern bikes are much better value though.although they will also ride better I still like the ride of my 92 marin although i am limited to where it goes.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 12:53 pm
 AD
Posts: 1577
Full Member
 

By coincidence I have just found a copy of MTB Pro issue 6 (March 94)!
Halson Inversion Forks: £285
Fat Chance Yo Eddy Team frame with custom painted Manitou 3: £1129 (Full bike £2850)
Bontrager Race Lite: £999 with custom Judy's
Cannondale Killer V 900: £1200
Kona Kilauea: £989
Slinshot frame and fork: £958

At the time I was still at Uni and riding round Edinburgh on a '92 Diamond back Topanga (bought from Warminster Cycle centre!!! - good shout out by whytetrash above :))
Ended up buying a Bontrager Race OR frame in '96 for £699 with my first pay check.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 1:17 pm
Posts: 4468
Full Member
 

Nerd alert… The Team was a 1990 or 91, light grey Zolatone 90, dark grey 91. Must have been something wrong with it as that era Marins rode well. Maybe a bit neutral but certainly nothing to dislike.

It was a 91 then, dark grey 'paint'. I'll still stand by the worst bike I ever rode though...


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 1:20 pm
Posts: 3643
Full Member
 

Chester - RS Quadras were their first elastomer fork, I think a year or two before the Judy (Mrs was sponsored by Parkpre and her Judy forks arrived a few months after the main bike something like Feb 1995). So Quadras 1993-94 ish I guess.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 1:26 pm
Posts: 2653
Free Member
 

As for the 92 Marins you’d have been looking at around the following from memory:

Bolinas Ridge- £279.
Muirwoods- £340.
Palisades- £399.
Bear Valley- £450.
Eldridge- £550.
Pine Mountain- £650.
Team Marin- £800.
Team Issue- £1000.
Team Titanium- £££££££

If I can dig out an old MBUK I could confirm

Sounds about right. In 1993 I bought a fully rigid Bear Valley for £500. Kept it up until recently with road tyres on, before I bought my Arkose.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 2:45 pm
Posts: 21016
Full Member
 

Yup, £399 for my Palisades Trail back in 1992.

It was amazing.
So much better than my 531 British Eagle (from Warminster Cycles, I'd forgotten that!).

It was a choice between the Marin and the Kona (Cinder Cone?).
The Kona looked sooooo much better, but the rear tyre clearance was mince.

I should have bought both.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 3:30 pm
Posts: 6809
Full Member
 

Chester – RS Quadras were their first elastomer fork

Of course they were! Cheaper alternative to the Mag's.


 
Posted : 19/04/2020 6:52 pm
Page 3 / 3