On Thu, May 13, 2010 at 12:29 PM, Tim McNamara <[email protected]> wrote:

> I bought my wife a 55 cm 1993 XO-1 from the Bridgestone Owner's Bunch sale
> in (IIRC) 1994 when B-stone was closing up shop in the US.  It was an
> engagement/wedding present.  She loved the bike and rode it lots.
>  Unfortunately it met its demise at her office one day.  It was locked up in
> front of the building when a lady apparently confused the brake and gas
> pedal while parking (note it was a Toyota, so who knows).  The car surged
> over the curb directly at the front windows of a beauty parlor on the first
> floor, ran over the bike and the sign to which it was locked, was diverted
> by this the accelerated down the sidewalk parallel to the building until it
> struck a tree.  You could see where she continued to spin the wheels until
> the car died.  No one was hurt but several people- the driver, the
> beauticians and their customers were of course terrified.
>
> The bike was destroyed.  Every tube was bent except the head tube.  The
> wheels were mangled.  Almost nothing was salvageable.  The driver's
> insurance company (State Farm) was a complete PITA to deal with (and lost
> our auto and homeowner's insurance business as a result).  My wife was
> distraught, not only for the bike itself but also its meaning.
>
> Here's why I tell about the tragedy.  I replaced the bike with a Heron Road
> with full Superbe, building it up over months at a friend's shop and
> sneaking it into the house while we were out on Christmas Eve with the help
> of neighbors.  She was shocked and delighted and, more than 10 years later,
> rides the Heron lots.  But when I received the Heron frame from Rivendell
> and examined it closely and compared the two frames, I realized something
> about the XO-1.
>
> It was crude.  The lugs were not attractive.  They were not filed or
> thinned.  Tube mitering was not good.  The brazing was sloppy and incomplete
> around the BB shell.  The paint was not well done.  The Heron was a *vastly*
> better made frame.  My nostalgia for the XO-1 as a bike vanished (although
> my nostalgia for what it meant- it was basically our engagement ring-
> remains).
>
> The XO-1 is an iconic bike.  It's a unique moment in bike history with
> nothing really like it before or since from a major manufacturer.  But there
> are better bikes to be had (and Rivendell has a lot of 'em).  For the price
> these go for on eBay, I'd rather buy a better bike with that money.
>
> So my level of nostalgia for the XO-1 as a bike is pretty low.  I'd pay
> maybe $350 for one in near-mint condition.  Obviously I won't be winning any
> auctions...
>
>
Agreed 100%.  I had a 1993 XO-3 (lugged, Japan-made, same geometry as the
XO-1 with slightly heavier triple-butted tubing).  Actually, I had two, and
broke both in exactly the same way:  BB shell broke at the base of the
seat-tube lug.

I enjoyed the bike well enough for a while--it was my first attempt at an
allroad bike, and I built it up from the frame with my own selection of
components--but I've ridden much nicer production bikes since then, my 1984
Sequoia foremost among them.  The XO-3 was very stiff and seemed to transmit
even the smallest road vibrations directly into my body, even with 1.75"
tires at 75psi (this was long before my eye-opening experience with 650B
tires at 55psi).

I also had a '92 RB-1, which I miss far more than the XO-3.  Even with 28mm
tires at 95psi, it rode much smoother than the XO-3, and just had a springy
want-to-go-FAST feel entirely lacking in the other bike.

So, like Tim, I have very little nostalgia for the XOs, except as a
praiseworthy attempt to do something completely different in production
bikes.

If any Bridgestone could tempt me these days, it would be the '92-'94 RB-T,
which has very similar geometry to my Sequoia.  And no, I wouldn't go for
the nostalgia build--it would be the normal mix of old and new stuff I have
lying around:  TA or AT cranks, modern Shimano 9-speed drivetrain, Ergo
brifters, BMX pedals, etc.

Murray
Victoria, BC

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