|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
New to me CTS?
Well I found what for me is a dream bike, I believe it is a 2001 CTS, heavily scratched up was apparently much loved by the previous owner. I’m simply going to update her to 11 speed XTR single chain ring etc. If any one has any info about this bike I would be grateful. She is my first Serotta MTB. Her serial no is SP 38 033, I’m wondering if Dave Kirk had a hand in her genesis.
__________________
welcome to the monkey house Growing older but not up |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
The Colorado Soft Tail was an interesting thing. I’d built my own full Ti suspension bike as an after work project and it really turned me on to how much suspension could help. At the time full suspension bikes were’t used for racing as they were looked at as too heavy and bouncy so the idea of a limited travel race bike was stuck in my head.
I had a rough idea of how I wanted to do it and I went to Ben Serotta and just causally floated the idea to see what he thought. He was not excited by the idea but he didn’t say “no” and in my youthful mind that left the door open. I did a bunch of design work on the bits and pieces needed to make it happen and when Ben left for a dealer tour I rushed and built two of what would become the CST….one for me and one for a gifted racer and fellow employee named Greg. We had fully finished and production ready prototypes done and being tested by the time Ben got back and I rolled one into his office and held my breath in anticipation of an angry boss. But Ben was very cool about it. When I showed him how few special parts were needed to build the frames (nearly everything was off the shelf) he liked the idea. Further testing resulted in some very minor changes but the overall concept held. The bike was designed under cover in about 2 days and we had bikes on the ground in less than a week. I really liked the ride but feel that they would have benefited from a custom shock to deal with the travel ratio. It would have given a better ride with more adjustability to suit the rider (it was not great for super light riders as the shock couldn’t be made soft enough given that chainstays were effectively springs too). I guess they offered them for some time after I left in 1999. It was a bit of a unicorn but I liked them. dave |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
Dave pal is a unicorn.
__________________
🏻* |
#5
|
||||
|
||||
Great to see another one here. Now you will have to look for a road version. Here are my pair.
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Next one has gotta be a CX bike
Quote:
I’ve had a CTi, lovely bike, sold it to buy a Ducati, stupid me. Still have my CO and Atlanta. Didn’t know that Serotta did a Softail road bike, I’ve gotta find my Paris-Roubaix Rockshox fork now.
__________________
welcome to the monkey house Growing older but not up |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Many many thanks
Thanks Dave for the info, I was looking for a smaller form factor bike to make it easier to transport than my Surly Karate Monkey, and I’m not a suspension guy, all my bikes are on rigid/carbon forks, so this is my first kinda full suspension bike, one thing I really noticed is the amount of fun this bike is to just ride around, the rear shock seems good to me, the fork is a mystery, downloaded the manual and will go from there.
Thanks again for your input, that stuff matters a lot to me.
__________________
welcome to the monkey house Growing older but not up |
Tags |
mtb, serotta, titanium |
|
|