Re: [CR]Anybody Heard of the Stella Arctic?

(Example: Racing:Jean Robic)

From: "Diane Feldman" <feldmanbike@home.com>
To: <fred_rednor@yahoo.com>, <RALEIGH531@aol.com>, <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
References: <20010605170833.29959.qmail@web11904.mail.yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: [CR]Anybody Heard of the Stella Arctic?
Date: Tue, 5 Jun 2001 10:10:17 -0700


Maybe the question has gone through the group before, but what legal issues would somebody trip over if naming a new line of frames/bikes after a defunct one? I have heard, for instance, that a Texas bike store has sold some reportedly very good 753 frames made in South Africa and labeled Lejeune. This obviously doesn't include frames like Jonathan Boyer's Confentes or George Mount's Merz--or those made-in-Nevada Gitanes that some
other guy rode.
David Feldman


----- Original Message -----
From: Fred Rafael Rednor
To: RALEIGH531@aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2001 10:08 AM
Subject: Re: [CR]Anybody Heard of the Stella Arctic?



> > To protect the guilty? Preserve the rep of the quality
> > nameplates? They knew they were sending less than their
> > best effort and didn't want a bunch of gaspipe bikes > >
> running(or sitting) around with "good" names on them.
>
> Also, there were a number of cases where the importer used a
> name of its own choosing to create its own brand - Mel Pinto
> for example, who's own bikes looked suspiciously like mid-level
> LeJeunes. In fact, someone like LeJeune probably did not even
> make its own frames, even if the painting was done in-house.
> Many bikes may have been shipped here by pseudo-manufacturers
> who were merely assemblers of frames made by larger concerns.
> Fred
>
>
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