#11
|
|||
|
|||
Last year, looking for parts, I found them in Canada. Quebec IIRC. Peugeot bikes
are no longer made in France. Canada had some parts. HTH, Ernie Arthur Harris wrote: "Slavko Vorkapitch" wrote: Is Peugeot still in business ? Anybody know a dealer in So. Cal ? I think they still sell cars, but not bikes. If you want an old Peugeot, try eBay. Art Harris |
Ads |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
Last year, looking for parts, I found them in Canada. Quebec IIRC. Peugeot bikes
are no longer made in France. Canada had some parts. HTH, Ernie Arthur Harris wrote: "Slavko Vorkapitch" wrote: Is Peugeot still in business ? Anybody know a dealer in So. Cal ? I think they still sell cars, but not bikes. If you want an old Peugeot, try eBay. Art Harris |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Last year, looking for parts, I found them in Canada. Quebec IIRC. Peugeot bikes
are no longer made in France. Canada had some parts. HTH, Ernie Arthur Harris wrote: "Slavko Vorkapitch" wrote: Is Peugeot still in business ? Anybody know a dealer in So. Cal ? I think they still sell cars, but not bikes. If you want an old Peugeot, try eBay. Art Harris |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
I don't know about Peugeot, but you can still get a cheap and
cheerful all cromo brand new Motobecane from bikesdirect.com for $325 bucks including shipping, if that's French sounding enough for ya. Room for fenders and downtube shifters, and it's red. Oh my! And made in China/Taiwan with inferior components... I would stay away from those. -- Phil, Squid-in-Training |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
I don't know about Peugeot, but you can still get a cheap and
cheerful all cromo brand new Motobecane from bikesdirect.com for $325 bucks including shipping, if that's French sounding enough for ya. Room for fenders and downtube shifters, and it's red. Oh my! And made in China/Taiwan with inferior components... I would stay away from those. -- Phil, Squid-in-Training |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
I don't know about Peugeot, but you can still get a cheap and
cheerful all cromo brand new Motobecane from bikesdirect.com for $325 bucks including shipping, if that's French sounding enough for ya. Room for fenders and downtube shifters, and it's red. Oh my! And made in China/Taiwan with inferior components... I would stay away from those. -- Phil, Squid-in-Training |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
On Sun, 05 Sep 2004 02:14:16 +0000, ZeeExSixAre wrote:
And made in China/Taiwan with inferior components... like a lot of not so cheap Treks, Giants, Marins... Sora components, and cheap but fine Tektro brakes. Same as most sub 500 dollar bikes. Perhaps you have something against the Chinese and Taiwanese? Since they manufacture fine stuff if that's what you want, you want crap, they'll sell you crap My road bike has great riding Taiwanese tires--no flats for 3000 miles. I can't say that for any European brands I've ever used. Sorry if it's not made with "fine French craftmanship" LOL, but for someone who knows their size, can assemble it themselves, and is on a tight budget--I can't think of a finer bike for under $500 brand new. Yes it's not a "real" Motobecane, but it's got some of the old vibe: it's quality steel, handles light touring, and has a pretty relaxed frame. I would have bought one if I'd seen it a year ago when I was restoring my current ride. |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
On Sun, 05 Sep 2004 02:14:16 +0000, ZeeExSixAre wrote:
And made in China/Taiwan with inferior components... like a lot of not so cheap Treks, Giants, Marins... Sora components, and cheap but fine Tektro brakes. Same as most sub 500 dollar bikes. Perhaps you have something against the Chinese and Taiwanese? Since they manufacture fine stuff if that's what you want, you want crap, they'll sell you crap My road bike has great riding Taiwanese tires--no flats for 3000 miles. I can't say that for any European brands I've ever used. Sorry if it's not made with "fine French craftmanship" LOL, but for someone who knows their size, can assemble it themselves, and is on a tight budget--I can't think of a finer bike for under $500 brand new. Yes it's not a "real" Motobecane, but it's got some of the old vibe: it's quality steel, handles light touring, and has a pretty relaxed frame. I would have bought one if I'd seen it a year ago when I was restoring my current ride. |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
On Sun, 05 Sep 2004 02:14:16 +0000, ZeeExSixAre wrote:
And made in China/Taiwan with inferior components... like a lot of not so cheap Treks, Giants, Marins... Sora components, and cheap but fine Tektro brakes. Same as most sub 500 dollar bikes. Perhaps you have something against the Chinese and Taiwanese? Since they manufacture fine stuff if that's what you want, you want crap, they'll sell you crap My road bike has great riding Taiwanese tires--no flats for 3000 miles. I can't say that for any European brands I've ever used. Sorry if it's not made with "fine French craftmanship" LOL, but for someone who knows their size, can assemble it themselves, and is on a tight budget--I can't think of a finer bike for under $500 brand new. Yes it's not a "real" Motobecane, but it's got some of the old vibe: it's quality steel, handles light touring, and has a pretty relaxed frame. I would have bought one if I'd seen it a year ago when I was restoring my current ride. |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
Is Peugeot still in business ?
Yes, in Switzerland: http://www.bikes.peugeot.ch/de/index.htm -- "Bicycling is a healthy and manly pursuit with much to recommend it, and, unlike other foolish crazes, it has not died out." -- The Daily Telegraph (1877) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Peugeot ? | Slavko Vorkapitch | General | 30 | September 9th 04 07:55 AM |
Peugeot rear derailleur hanger? | Black Bat | UK | 12 | June 16th 04 08:20 PM |
How to identify this older Peugeot road bike? | Rick Onanian | General | 6 | July 11th 03 08:57 PM |