PS: the current Atlantis design rides better than mine. But it's just a 
bike, after all. I wouldn't stress about who built it if it's a Rivendell.

dougP

On Monday, November 4, 2024 at 3:27:54 PM UTC-8 dougP wrote:

> I bought my Atlantis in '03. One time, another Atlantis owner asked if 
> mine had "roundy lugs or pointy lugs". Don't know if that IDs the builder. 
> I figure if it's good enough for Grant it's good enough for me. 20+ years 
> of loaded touring in all sorts of conditions & sometimes minimal 
> maintenance, & the bike is still going strong. It has been abused enough 
> that I had it repainted a few years back. It was way beyond "beausage".
>
> dougP
>
> On Monday, November 4, 2024 at 2:50:41 PM UTC-8 iamkeith wrote:
>
>> To Mathias' note  I would suggest that Richard Sachs, Mark Nobillette and 
>> Joe Starck were the most notable early builders.. along with but ahead of 
>> Waterford.  But I suggest that mostly because doing so  illustrates a 
>> point:  that there's a lot of subjective measure as to what or whos is 
>> "better."
>>
>> As the others note, Grant has always been very adamant that all of 
>> Rivendell's "factories" are equally good, so who are we to challenge that.  
>> As the others state, having Toyo make larger batches was just one step in a 
>> continuous and ongoing process of trying to keep the bikes affordable.
>>
>> All that said, and since I own a couple of Toyo-built models, I like to 
>> IMAGINE that they have some special magic.  If you can find the Reader 
>> article, it is pretty interesting.  I want to say mid 40s in issue no.  The 
>> biggest thing, if I remember correctly, was the amount of experience and 
>> expertise the builders had.  There were several "tiers" of craftsmen, with 
>> the most important work being left to the seniors.  (Or do zI have this 
>> mixed up with Nitto??!  Maybe both?) They were/are true craftsmen, seeing 
>> brazing as a calling and lifetime career, and multi-generational in some 
>> cases. In theory, experience keeps someone from over-heating a tube, or 
>> impropperly filling a joint, and "could" make a stronger and prettier 
>> frame.  In practice, it probably doesn't make much difference. I don’t know 
>> if there's room or appreciation for that level of craftsmanship in the 
>> world anymore.  I bought the Japanese Steel coffee table book from Riv.  It 
>> is nice to think about a time when that culture DID exist. 
>>
>> There were other, minordetails that only an overly obsessed bike geek 
>> would care about, like: subtlely s-shaped chainstays on the Atlantis;  
>> graceful, double-taper seat stays on the Rambouillet; and artfully thinned 
>> edges on the lugs of the Saluki.  Many of the high-quality steel tubes that 
>> era are no longer made, but I don't know if they were superior or not.  
>> Tubing manufacture and metalurgy is a huge rabbit hole to jump into, if 
>> someone was interested.  Grant has always shunned the ultra-lite, exotic 
>> tubes in favor of durability, anyway.  One other interesting thought is 
>> that, in that era, the frames were 100% brazed (maybe with the exception of 
>> canti posts).  So a damaged tube or stay could theoretically be replaced 
>> with greater ease.
>>
>> All the design refinements manifested in the newer models certainly 
>> out-weigh any artisan touches of the old models.  Some day, when China 
>> takes Taiwan, we're all going to wax nostalgic about what we have now!
>>
>>
>>
>> On Monday, November 4, 2024 at 11:18:18 AM UTC-7 Jason Fuller wrote:
>>
>>> As covered, Toyo was used to build Rivendell batch frames for a period 
>>> when it was more cost-effective than building stateside at Waterford, but a 
>>> couple years later exchange rates made it not as economically viable to 
>>> have frames made in Japan anymore so they started working with Maxway in 
>>> Taiwan. The quality is very similar across all three, the tubing is 
>>> essentially the same, but there is an emotional component that can make one 
>>> have value over the other. 
>>>
>>> On Monday 4 November 2024 at 09:47:14 UTC-8 Glen wrote:
>>>
>>>> Toyo was the early frame builder for Rivendell. They are a Japanese 
>>>> company with a long history of building frames. 
>>>>
>>>> Somewhere in a Riv Reader there is an article on them. You may be able 
>>>> to find some information on Jim's site http://www.cyclofiend.com/rbw/ 
>>>>
>>>> As for better, well of course they are if you have one :-)
>>>>
>>>> On Monday, November 4, 2024 at 10:28:14 AM UTC-7 cfic...@gmail.com 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I've occasionally seen this term in ads, posts, etc. What is the 
>>>>> meaning of it, and is it better than a non Toyo frame? 
>>>>>
>>>>> Chuck 
>>>>>
>>>>

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