#31
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The headtubes seem short on paper. But Serotta knows a lot more about proper design than I do so I give them the benefit of the doubt. I would have to see one and probably ride one before I would buy though. When the time comes I willl have to find a dealer with one in stock.
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#32
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As I have just gone thru the fitting process for my cda, I will add to the head tube being too short on the HSG's for my build. If the top tube is correct and I do not flip stem upside down, my rib cage would hit my thighs when in the drops.
I really wanted to like the bike, but it just will not work. My Fierte has no spacers under the stem, but the shift to the HSG is too much!!! |
#33
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Different people have different needs, and that is the beauty of it all. Now there are more options. for everyones flexability. You can ride the fierte and someone with a different need can fit on the HSG where they would normally look to another manufacturer for a stock geometry road bike. Brilliant! |
#34
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Probably a stupid question, but...
Did Serotta ever consider a HSG Track model? I think that this could possibly sell with the new fixed gear craze. Just my $.02.
Pettit
__________________
"To give anything less than your best is to sacrifice the gift." -Pre "Somebody may beat me, but they are going to have to bleed to do it." -Pre My Heart of Steel |
#35
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I think they could make a _serious_ track bike, but those hipster bikes cost less than a set of wheels. no way they're paying $3k a frame for someone to just pull the decals off and lock it to a parking meter. if track guys are racing these--then they'll get respect. I say get more folks racing their (serotta's) frames where they can be seen. people are posting pics non-stop of sweet-as-hell bikes in the mud or ridin' the pines, but none say serotta. they could do anything to get as many people as possible riding their stuff at competitions. people see that, well--they wanna buy the bike. bmc=case in point just my opinion |
#36
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Pettit
__________________
"To give anything less than your best is to sacrifice the gift." -Pre "Somebody may beat me, but they are going to have to bleed to do it." -Pre My Heart of Steel |
#37
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the hsg cross bike is a great price point imo. I think they can sell a bunch
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#38
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Years ago I remember drooling over Tim Goodwin's custom Csi track bike at RBM in Richardson, TX. I can't remember if it was white or frost white, and since Tim was at least a half foot shorter than me it was nowhere near my size, but I distinctly recall feeling that I WANTED THAT. (I ended up buying an Atlanta, then later a Csi from Tim).
I have no doubt that Serotta has both the knowlege and skill to make an absolutley killer track bike in stock sizes. But, I think the dilemma here again would be the price point. I think many of the hardcore trackies would spend the extra couple hundred bucks for full-custom (and you can get that right now, if you want it, right?). I just wish they'd reconsider the graphics for these stock models. I've always thought Serotta's were some of the classiest bikes out there, but these new graphics just give them a "cheap" feel. YMMV considerably. |
#39
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#40
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Geez guys nothing really has changed with Serotta, you want a TRACK bike order one in any material you want. HSG is just a way to get dealers to put stuff on the floor that they can sell with no client requested options. The Fierte Line was a really good seller for Serotta that way so why not expand the concept to the other lines. So for me as a fitter HSG takes me pretty much out of the equation EXCEPT most of the clients that I see would not fit well on long and low racing bikes, for that matter I could not ride an HSG geometry either for that very fact that I need a higher handlebar placement.
So relax and if you want it they shall build it except an Hors Categorie or a Uniscasi Steel bike I applaud Serotta for making a lower price point bike available BUT I think the landscape is changing so fast with Carbone Fibre materials that even Serotta will need to look overseas to produce a HSG at a pricepoint that will sell in larger quantities. Maybe their aquisition of the old Reynolds CA plant is a step in the right direction but it will be hard to compete with foreign sourced Carbone bikes in the distant future, some like my buddy Climb may say that is already the case and I may tend to agree with him. Would you buy a Fierte Carbone bike for $ 2000 made overseas ?
__________________
www.BikeFitBySmiley.com |
#41
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I hope that builders like Serotta are able to compete in this world of cheap Chinese imports. Their deal with Reynolds is very big news though, bigger than people here talk about. I wonder if there will be a steel HSG? The carbon one is still pretty spendy. |
#42
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yeah, why isn't this getting more airplay? sounds like some very smart decisions are being made RE:carbon. Quote:
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#43
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No , we need you to keep after Serotta to make bikes with level tt. |
#44
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Sorry, I just COULDN'T resist. |
#45
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Calfee and Parlee, to name two, are making CF bikes at lower price points than Serotta with the same tubing source in the US or perhaps these days from a closely-related US spin-off. Assuming all three makers pay their work force about the same, and given that Serotta's fixed costs are amortized over a larger base, I think it's fair to say that the HSG and Attack CF frames are not priced where they are because they're domestically made. Second, Ben Serotta has built up enough goodwill by his attention to design and construction that if he chose to have an Asian-sourced line of CF bikes I would hope most here would expect them to be up to Serotta's historic standards and consider them worthy of purchase. Of course, they'd have to have a level top tube and a decent paint job |
Tags |
hsg, serotta |
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