Miyata never bought the company. Two separate companies in partnership.
Koga-Miyata was under Dutch ownership, not Japanese ownership.
Frames may have been supplied by Miyata, but they are not the same company.
It's like saying that Giant and Schwinn were the same company in the late 1980s because Giant supplied most of Schwinn's frames ...
On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 07:47:47 -0700 (PDT), Jerome & Elizabeth Moos wrote
> I have a 90's lugged steel Koga-Miyata. I'd call it Japanese-Dutch.
> Note the wording below. "Developed and assembled in Netherlands"
> To me that means the frames are built in Japan, with the bikes
> assembled in Netherlands. "Developed" means the frames, or maybe
> just the list of components, are "designed" in Netherlands. I like
> Koga-Miyatas, but I regard the frames, at least, as much more
> Japanese than Dutch. BTW, does anyone have an old Koga, before
> Miyata bought the company? I have no clue what sort of bikes they
> built or the time frame.
>
> Regards,
>
> Jerry Moos
> Houston, TX
>
> Koga-Miyata is Dutch, not Japanese ...
>
> >From http://www.kogamiyata.com/
>
> Since the beginning of 1974 every Koga-Miyata has been developed and
> assembled in our headquarters in Heerenveen, Netherlands. A
> demanding process whereby every bicycle is assembled by hand, from
> start to finish, by a fitter. This is a logical choice for Koga,
> which is derived directly from our philosophy about quality.
>
> ---
>
> Koga-Miyata is part of the Accell Group, which is an international
> group of companies, active in design, production, marketing and
> sales of bicycles. Accell Group has production locations in the
> Netherlands, Germany and France. Sales of bicycles of the brands
> Batavus, Cool!/Loekie, Hercules, Koga-Miyata, Lapierre, Mercier and
> Sparta take place in the Netherlands, Germany, France and other
> countries including Belgium, Scandinavia, Switzerland and Austria.
>
> http://www.accell-group.com/
>
> On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 13:24:42 -0700 (PDT), brad stockwell wrote
> > Miyata Fans:
> >
> > For what it's worth, racers sponsored by Miyata made a splash in
> > the '80 and '81 Tours.
> >
> > The 1980 team was Ijsboerke Warncke Koga Miyata. They finished
> > second in the team classification (behind TI Raleigh). Team member
> > Ludo Peeters finished 8th on GC, and team member Rudy Pevanage was
> > the points champion (ahead of Sean Kelly, riding for the Splendor
> > team). Pevanage also wore the yellow jersey during the first week.
> > The bikes were blue with gold headtube/downtube/seatube bands, Dura
> > Ace equipped.
> >
> > The 1981 team was Capri Sonne Koga Miyata. This time they
> > finished 3rd in the team classification behind Peugeot and Renault.
> > Team member Peter Winnen finished 5th on GC and won the young rider
> > classification. He also kicked major booty on Alpe De Huez, winning
> > the stage and finished 8 sec up on Hinault, 9 sec up on Van Impe (on
> > a "Boston" bike), and 12 seconds up on Alban on his Motobecane Team Champ.
> >
> > Could it be that Miyata was the first Japanese frame to be ridden
> > in the Tour?
> >
> > Brad Stockwell
> > Palo Alto
> >
> >
> >
> >
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> > _______________________________________________
>
> --
> Steven L. Sheffield
> stevens at veloworks dot com
> bellum pax est libertas servitus est ignoratio vis est
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> _______________________________________________
--
Steven L. Sheffield
stevens at veloworks dot com
bellum pax est libertas servitus est ignoratio vis est
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