Questions about bike hire abroad and everything light bike related. No off-topic chat please
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Carbon_Cowboy
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by Carbon_Cowboy on Thu Feb 18, 2010 6:49 am
No but 900g road frames and sub 17 lb mountain bikes are. They aren't (just) an aluminum bike maker anymore but if a great alu bike was easy to make everyone would do it.
bradeng wrote:Supersix Evo: 700grams
Whoa! Didn't they hire the German dude who designed the Scott Addict? I think I remember reading this somewhere; if so this is probably the sign of great things to come.
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STARNUT
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by STARNUT on Thu Feb 18, 2010 7:02 am
Peter Denk, the same guy who made the addicts, you're correct. He's a carbon ninja and he works for Cannondale and that means pimp stuff. He designed the Flash... so... think about that for a bit.
JV is right, Cannondale has always been engineering, innovation, and technology driven... They were never defined by a "Made in America" moniker. They embrace it but they have never used it as a reason to buy the bikes. Buying a Cannondale solely based on where it's made is like a blind squirrel finding a nut, everyone gets lucky. You're lucky it didn't suck. You're irrational choice was reaffirmed by good performance. Sadly, a lot of people associate that performance with American manufacturing not Cannondale's ability to design and build a bad-ma'm-a-jamma bike, even if it's made on the moon. Adding Denk to the Peck stable means there is likely some really cool sh!t on the way...
Starnut
Last edited by
STARNUT on Thu Feb 18, 2010 8:05 am, edited 4 times in total.
"Don't pedal harder, pedal faster!"
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2 wheels
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by 2 wheels on Thu Feb 18, 2010 7:47 am
Industry News: Design Guru Peter Denk Joins Cannondale, GT and MongooseBy Screamin Mimi - October 21, 2009 - 17:43
http://blogs.bikemag.com/industry-news/industry-news-design-guru-peter-denk-joins-cannondale-gt-and-mongooseCycling Sports Group hire Peter Denk By James Huang, Technical editor - Tue 20 Oct 2009, 6:45 pm UTC
http://www.bikeradar.com/news/article/cycling-sports-group-hire-peter-denk--23680Denk is best known for his decade-plus collaboration with Scott (where he and his Germany-based firm steered such key carbon projects as the Spark, Scale, CR1 and Addict, plus their associated CR1 and IMP construction technologies) that ended in late 2007.
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For now, Denk and his Denk Engineering GmbH colleague – who is also now a full-time employee of CSG – will both remain in Germany.
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"I can't really give you any details at this point but I can tell you that even before this announcement, Peter's been working with us on a number of projects that will come out for model year 2011," he said.
Flash: Cannondale’s 16.6-pound cross-country bikeby Robbie Stout
http://velonews.competitor.com/2009/07/bikes-tech/flash-cannondales-16-6-pound-cross-country-bike_94319The Flash Carbon was co-developed with former Scott bicycles engineer and carbon technologies guru Peter Denk. After a decade of partnership, Denk and Scott Sports parted ways in October of 2008. Together, Cannondale and Denk have created what they are calling the lightest hardtail, ever.
Scott and Denk Engineering end R&D relationshiphttp://weightweenies.starbike.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=33321
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Frans
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by Frans on Thu Feb 18, 2010 8:44 pm
Why do a lot of big guys like Spec, Trek, Giant, Cannondale NOT make carbon CX?
Is it too small a niche to spend the R&D to get it right and not break under Frankie in P-R?
The comfort benefits of carbon over thick Alu that most of us believe in seem a perfect application.
What's really working in the UK are CX bikes with eyelets for fenders etc.
The Genesis Croix deFer sells like hot cakes but more people realize too late that it's a tank.
Would love a 7.5 kg carbon commuter with cantis, Vs or discs, I don't care, and room and eyelets for full fenders. It could double as a tasty winter trainer. I'm lucky that I don't have to lock it up at the work end, I have an internal garage.
With all the bike commuting in London this isn't as niche as it sounds. Boardman realizes this and is selling a GBP999 CX bike (no eyelets IIRC).
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greenmachine
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by greenmachine on Thu Feb 18, 2010 9:07 pm
Most of our customers havent got a clue where Cannondales are made but one thing they do know is how sweet they ride which is why they buy them and the way my supersix performs i couldnt care if my mum made it, its a rocket.
CX is picking up in a big way in the UK at present and Cannondale will get there timing perfectly for 2011 with the carbon model, ill be ordering our first one fo me.
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coloclimber
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euan
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by euan on Thu Feb 18, 2010 9:45 pm
2002SaecoReplica wrote:This is not GM or Chrysler we're talking about. Made in the USA Cannondale aluminum has, and continues to be, the benchmark of aluminum bicycles in the industry. Part of the mystique of a Caad9 is that it is hand made by artisans. It's not just cranked out of some factory like some mass produced nike shoes.
And I've got a feeling Made in the Far East Cannondale alu will continue to be the benchmark of alu bikes.
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record
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by record on Thu Feb 18, 2010 10:30 pm
I don't agree Starnut.
Cannondale is, in many european cyclists opinions, the brand with the biggest "Made in USA" image out there. They were the only US company that proudly wrote "Handmade in USA" on the seatstays on all their bikes and I believe it was part of the image, a fact that they were made there, from the scratch. Cannondale = made in USA (for many people)
A light bike does replace good fitness.
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STARNUT
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by STARNUT on Fri Feb 19, 2010 2:50 am
record wrote:I don't agree Starnut.
Cannondale is, in many european cyclists opinions, the brand with the biggest "Made in USA" image out there. They were the only US company that proudly wrote "Handmade in USA" on the seatstays on all their bikes and I believe it was part of the image, a fact that they were made there, from the scratch. Cannondale = made in USA (for many people)
Would Euro's have bought them if their performance was subpar. IE is was substantially heavier, softer, uncomfortabler (is that a word
) that it's competition?
Starnut
"Don't pedal harder, pedal faster!"
Q-FACTOR IS A RED HERRING BB30.COM
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cc3chan
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by cc3chan on Fri Feb 19, 2010 6:54 am
Is the Super Six going to be redesigned for 2011? I'm asking because I'm thinking of getting the Hi Mod frameset and it would kind of suck if it was getting a significant makeover.
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BrianAllan
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by BrianAllan on Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:04 am
euan wrote:2002SaecoReplica wrote:This is not GM or Chrysler we're talking about. Made in the USA Cannondale aluminum has, and continues to be, the benchmark of aluminum bicycles in the industry. Part of the mystique of a Caad9 is that it is hand made by artisans. It's not just cranked out of some factory like some mass produced nike shoes.
And I've got a feeling Made in the Far East Cannondale alu will continue to be the benchmark of alu bikes.
And I've got a feeling you didn't get his initial point.
This is a silly debate. Look people, just accept the fact that SOME (keyword, I didn't say ALL) people admire Cannondale as a company because of their strong American heritage. And yes, despite what you say, seek out the brand and pay a price premium for their products because of where it's built. Well, they did anyway.
I'm not trying to rehash a discussion then went on ad-nosium when Cannondale sold out, just making a minor point. Now move on and discuss the hideously large and many decals Cannondale will place on their 2011 line.
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MarvinK
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by MarvinK on Fri Feb 19, 2010 7:57 am
When I think of Cannondale, I think of warranty claims and shoddy management.... and then maybe engineering ability.
I like Cannondale, but they have as much negative reputation as positive... and being bought by Dorel and promptly moving manufacturing overseas didn't help.