Re: Re: [CR]Fontan Pau

(Example: Framebuilding:Brazing Technique)

From: "ternst" <ternst1@cox.net>
To: <artlink@flash.net>, "classic rendezvous" <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
References: <20061109024710.82457.qmail@web34110.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
Subject: Re: Re: [CR]Fontan Pau
Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2006 19:05:56 -0800
reply-type=original

Yeah, I'm a couple of years off. I remembered more of the timeline once I posted. So much for being impetuous. The old man Langher who raced in the 1890's told us that about 1910 +/- kids would throw small sticks and/or stones at him and other racers on their bikes yelling, "Look at the funny guy on a bike!". That's also the time frame that he told us seeing scrap iron fields of bikes being plowed under because no one wanted them and they didn't bother to melt
them down.
(sic)Transit Gloria.
Ted Ernst
Palos Verdes Estates
CA USA


----- Original Message -----
From: Arthur Link
To: classic rendezvous
Sent: Wednesday, November 08, 2006 6:47 PM
Subject: Fwd: Re: [CR]Fontan Pau



> Not so,Ted. The Ford Model T was several years later. Bike oversupply
> and price wars in the late 1890's caused prices to drop fro the $150 range
> to under $40. This lead tto the American Bicycle Consortium, which many
> manufacturers refused to join. Many simply went belly up. There was such a
> glut of perfectly adequate used bikes that the new bikes with minor
> technical advances found fewer and fewer takers. Used bike salesmen
> enjoyed the same shoddy reputation then as used car salesmen do now,using
> every guile to move the inventory. The next big assault on the industry
> came with the motorization of the bicycle. Hendee a Us National champ on
> the ordinary, manufactured the Indian bicycle,which quickly morphed into
> the Indian Motorcycle. Daimler, Overland, Pope and others made high priced
> cars inaccessible to the masses. Henry Ford and the Model T in the early
> 1900's put the nail into the bicycle for most Americans,as everyday
> transport, but not for the rest of the emerging
> industrial world even to this day. Art Link,San Antonio,Texas,USA
>
> ternst <ternst1@cox.net> wrote: From: "ternst" <ternst1@cox.net>
> To: <artlink@flash.net>, "classic rendezvous"
> <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
> Subject: Re: [CR]Fontan Pau
> Date: Wed, 8 Nov 2006 18:16:59 -0800
>
> That's because they were a-FORDING something else.
> Ted Ernst
> Palos Verdes Estates
> CA USA
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Arthur Link"
> To: "classic rendezvous"
> Sent: Wednesday, November 08, 2006 5:16 PM
> Subject: [CR]Fontan Pau
>
>
>> Jerry Moos asked if there was any previous pro cyclist who marketed his
>> own brand of bike while still racing.i.e. before retirement. That would
>> be
>> Arthur Zimmerman of New Jersey an American champion in the 1890's and who
>> also wowed the Brits and rode for Raleigh in the 1890's. He was involved
>> with the Zimmerman Manufacturing Co. of Freehold,N.J. (1895-1898) and
>> raced until 1897 and retired to run a hotel. The bike boom was rapidly
>> deflating due to oversupply and price cutting. Art Link, in sunny mid
>> 80's
>> F , San Antonio,Texas,USA
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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