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Early Mountain Bikes

In 1977 Joe Breeze, Gary Fisher and Charles Kelly started to build the first modern mountain bicycles, defined by their gearing, light weight, strength, and fat tires. Designed to go fast both up and down steep dirt trails. As soon as people saw the possibilities, innovation exploded outwards from Marin around the world. The early origins, from geared clunkers in Marin (1974) to the Breezer (1977) to the Stumpjumper (1981) are well documented1). What isn't as well known are the nearly 100 builders during this early period creating their own species of mountain bikes. From 1980, mountain bike sales figures grew by an order of magnitude each year from 300 bikes in 1980 to an astounding 5,000,000 in 19852). By 1984 every major manufacturer was making a mountain bike and there were over 100 frame builders creating very different designs.

Most of these have been forgotten. This is an attempt to make a timeline of ALL manufacturers and models of mountain bikes from 1976 → 1985. Some small builders with less than a dozen frames to their name have had huge influences.

Borrowing from Frank J. Berto's definition of a “Mountain Bike.” 3), a mt. bike must:

  • support tires > 2“
  • designed to be used off road
  • have low derailleur gearing 4)5)
  • good, non-coaster brakes
  • flat handle bars 6)
  • have a Marin pedigree or connection
  • be less than 40 pounds 7)8)

Kelly & Breeze
Breeze & Kelly with Breezers #1 & #2
Sequoia Nat. Forest, 1978 facebook


Charlie Kelly
Charlie Kelly, Repack, 1977, on a fully modified klunker. mmbhof.org


The Specialized Stumpjumper was the inflection point, where sales became exponential. Remarkably, the Stumpjumper wasn't even close to being the most popular mountain bike in any year that it sold. This title should go to the Univega Alpina, which consistently outsold Specialized, by a factor of 2→5 9). Specialized wasn't the first mass produced off-road bicycle, as that title can go to both the Lawwill-Knight Pro Cruiser, and the Schwinn 5 speeds off-road cruisers. However, those cheap mass produced bikes were either too heavy, lacked decent brakes or gearing and couldn't be reliably used on rough terrain. The Stumpjumper was the first well designed and mass produced mt. bike and should be standard to rate all others of its day. It's entry point into the market in November 1981 marks an explosion of new bicycle designs and world wide adoption. The resistance from established road bicycle makers to embrace the new bikes, which the world had been waiting for, enabled hundreds of smaller builders to flourish and eventually dominate the entire bicycle market.




Many early makers came from a background of BMX or cruiser designs, which had already embraced the fat-tire philosophy. Many are included in the timeline below if they're evolutionary significant, even if they aren't strong and light enough to be ridden down Repack. There were plenty of capable off road bicycles before 1970 which satisfied the mt. bike definition. For example, French touring and cyclo-velo bikes from 1930 → 1960 had wide tires, short gearing, sometimes under 20 pounds and were quite strong. Some had front suspension and disk brakes. But they never became popular and were evolutionary dead ends. It took the crucible of the Repack races to create the movement.

Repack lineup
Fairfax Enduro Lineup, 1977, Jerry Riboli Photo. Charlie Kelly's Mountain Bike Hubsite

2021/05/02 18:32 · gchandler


timeline.jpg←- timeline resources.jpg←- resources discuss.jpg←- discussion research.jpg←- research


This places all timelines onto a single, overloaded page. When a single page was the default, browser performance suffered and the page was often impossible to load. Splitting the timeline into time skewed tables now makes it harder to search for models. Perhaps a non-graphical, consolidated table would work better?

Brand1980s 1990s
4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
Allegro (Canada) Blackcomb 1984.jpg Blackcomb 1985.jpg Blackcomb ATB 1986.jpg Ground Control 1987.jpg Ground Control 1988.jpg Ground Control 1989.jpg Silver Bullet 1992.jpg
Ammaco logo.jpg Trail Finder 1984.jpg Trailmaster 26 1985.jpg Mountain Club 1987.jpg Mega Mania 1992.jpg
Bridgestone logo.jpg MB-3 1984b.jpg MB-1 1985.jpg MB-1 Competition 1986.jpg MB-3 1987.jpg MB-5 1988.jpg MB-6 1989.jpg MB-0 1990.jpg MB-2 Comp MB-3 1992.jpg MB-4 1993.jpg
Claud Butler logo.jpg Canyon 1984.jpg Canyon 1985.jpg Canyon 1986.jpg Cape Wrath 1987.jpg Pagan 1989.jpg Shaman 1990.jpg Shaman 1991.jpg Spectre 1992.jpg Vantage 1993.jpg
Cannondale logo.jpg SM-500 1984.jpg SM600 1985.jpg SM-600 1986.jpg SM-900 1987.jpg SM600 1988.jpg SM900 Red Shred 1989.jpg SM1000 1990.jpg SE1000 Delta V 2000 1992.jpg Delta V 1000 1993.jpg
CW Racing CREATOR: gd-jpeg v1.0 (using IJG JPEG v80), quality = 80 ATB 1984.jpg City Bike 1985.jpg 1986 1986.jpg 1987 1987.jpg
Dawes logo.jpg Ranger 1984.jpg Ranger 1985.jpg Ranger 1986.jpg Cougar ASCII Wildcat 1988.jpg Quest Raw Nerve CREATOR: gd-jpeg v1.0 (using IJG JPEG v80), quality = 85 Off Limits 1991.jpg The Edge 1992.jpgNew Wave 1993.jpg
DP Racing logo.jpg Escaper 1984.jpgEscaper 1985.jpg1986 CREATOR: gd-jpeg v1.0 (using IJG JPEG v62), quality = 75
F. W. Evans logo.jpg F. W. Evans 1984.jpg Conquest 1985.jpgConquest 1986.jpg
Falcon logo.jpg Town and Country 1984.jpg Everest 1986.jpg K2 1987.jpg Colorado 1988.jpg Commando 1989.jpg Cheetah 15 1990.jpg Fat Track 1991.jpg Mont Blanc 1992.jpg
Focus File written by Adobe Photoshop? 5.1 MB-400 1984.jpg MB-350 1985.jpg MB-450 1986.jpg
Gazelle logo.jpg Off the Road 1984.jpgOff the Road 1985.jpg ATB 1986.jpg Instinct 1988.jpg ATB Champion Mondial 1989.jpgInstinct 1992.jpgFormula 1993.jpg
Gecko logo.jpg Slickrock 1984.jpg Plainwrap 1986.jpg Y File It 1987.jpgY-File-It 1988.jpgSlickrock 1989.jpgY File It 1990.jpgGenesis 1991.jpgGenesis 1993.jpg
General Processed By eBay with ImageMagick, z1.1.0. ||B2 Mountain Shadow 1984.jpgStreet Shadow 1986.jpgStreet Shadow 1987.jpgPro Shadow 1989.jpg
Giant logo.jpg Escaper 1984.jpg High Sierra 1985.jpg Mesa Runner 1986.jpg Super Sierra 1987.jpg Super Sierra 1988.jpg Escaper 1989.jpg Hurricane 1990.jpg Terrago 1991.jpg CFM-1 1992.jpgALM-1 1993.jpg
Graecross Processed By eBay with ImageMagick, z1.1.0. ||B2 Jackeroo 1984.jpg Pathfinder 1985.jpg Jackaroo 1989.jpg Summit 1990.jpg Summit 1991.jpg Summit 1992.jpgJackaroo 1993.jpg
GT logo.jpg Timberline 1984.jpg Timberline 1985.jpg Backwoods LEAD Technologies Inc. V1.01 Avalanche 1987.jpg Avalanche 1988.jpg Tequesta 1989.jpg Karakoam 1990.jpg Xizang 1991.jpg Zaskar 1992.jpgRTS-1 1993.jpg
Hanebink * Hanebrink Mountain Shocker 1985.jpg SE Shocker 1986.jpg SE Shocker HPV Superbike 1988.jpg HPV Superbike 1989.jpg Extreme Terrain 1991.jpg Extreme Terrain 1993.jpg
Hercules logo.jpg MTB 1984.jpg Uvex Sportstyle MTB Competition 1986.jpg MTB Special 1987.jpg Super Competition 1988.jpg Super Competition 1989.jpg MTB Special 1990.jpg California Pro CREATOR: gd-jpeg v1.0 (using IJG JPEG v80), quality = 85 California Pro 1992.jpgDiablo 1993.jpg
Hodaka logo.jpg High gear
Brand 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
1980s 1990s
2022/07/22 08:29 · mtbtimeline
production summary


Production numbers are often guesswork, especially as mass production moved to Asia and the world moved to riding off road.

Year1970s 1980s 1990s
6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
Total Production 1 10 60 200 500 2,000 12,000 10) 120,000 1,000,00011) 2,500,00012) 6,000,00030,000,00050,000,000 13)55,000,00060,000,00060,000,00014)60,000,00060,000,000
2022/02/02 16:08 · mtbtimeline

Worldwide Bicycle Production

bike production
Mountain bikes drove an 80's boom in bicycle sales. Graph from: campagnolodelta

us bike sales
US Bike sales from 1981→2005. \# Mt. bikes were 10% of US sales in 1984 and doubled to 20% of US sales by 1985.15) bicycleretailer

2022/02/02 16:11 · mtbtimeline
2021/03/29 16:55 · gchandler

1) , 9)
The Birth of Dirt (3rd ed.) by Frank J. Berto
2)
The Birth of Dirt (3rd ed.) by Frank J. Berto, pages 12 & 83
3)
The Birth of Dirt (3rd ed.) by Frank J. Berto, page 26
4)
A low gear of 1:1 would be a good start with 26” tires. Some examples:
  1. Breezer Series I: 32 front x 26 rear. Not so good on a 38 pound bike. This is the same as 3rd gear on a 1979 Ritchey.
  2. 1979 Ritchey: 28 front x 32 rear. Good.
  3. Typical 1979 road racing bike: 44 inner x 18 rear, 700c tires. And people wondered why mountain bikes became so popular?
  4. 1981 Schwinn King Sting 5: 40 front x 28 rear. Not a mountain bike.
  5. 1982 Specialized Stumpjumper5: 26 front x 28 rear. Good.
  6. 1982 Schwinn King Sting 10: 40×48 front by 14-38 rear. Schwinn is getting there.
  7. 2021 Mt. Bikes: 34 single front x 52 rear. Super low. And generally heavier than any old-school Ritchey.
5)
Are modern downhill bikes mountain bikes? They're geared to go one direction only: down. For example, the Trek Session 9.9 (trekbikes) has its lowest gearing of 36×25 on 29“ rims. It simply can't go up. But it has 190mm of travel front and rear…
6)
Obviously there are some exemptions. See Cunningham for example. However arbitrary, some filtering is needed.
7)
What about e-bikes? The Trek Powerfly 9.7 weighs 51.5 pounds - with a carbon fiber frame…
8)
The United States International Trade Commission, which places an 11% tariff on mountain bikes, but only a 5.5% duty on road bikes, defines mountain bikes as: “Bicycles, not motorized, w/both wheels o/63.5 cm in diam., weighing 16.3 kg or more, and/or for use w/tires w/x-sect. diam. o/4.13 cm”. That is, rims >= 26”, weight > 36#(!) and tire width >= 42mm (1.6“). See: link. These definitions are very outdated, but still current. Hybrids get caught within this definition, but not light weight mountain bikes.
10)
Early US production numbers went up by a factor of 10 each year: The Birth of Dirt (3rd ed.) by Frank J. Berto.
11)
According to The Dancing Chain by Frank Berto, page 246, 1M mt. bikes were sold in 1984.
12)
Late production numbers from booksc.org “From Marin County's Seventies Clunker to the Durango World Championship 1990: A History of Mountain Biking in the USA”, by Savre, Frédéric, Saint-Martin, Jean, Terret, Thierry, August 2010. This source counted 550,000 mt. bikes sold only in the US.
13)
Mountain bikes drove a doubling of world wide bike sales during the 1980's to a peak of 110 million in 1988, of which 50% were mountain bikes, or at least 50 million. By 1990, mt. bikes were 65% of the market, or roughly 60 million. Sources: https://www.ibike.org/library/statistics-data.htm, https://ur.booksc.org/book/51351438/a06749.
14)
Bike sales plateaued during the early 90's before crashing in 1998.
start.1620590896.txt.gz · Last modified: by gchandler