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  2. Zipp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipp

    Zipp is an American company that is best known for designing, manufacturing, and marketing carbon-composite bicycle wheels for road cycling, triathlons, track racing, and mountain biking. The company's product range also includes handlebars, stems, seat posts, tires, inner tubes, handlebar tape, and bags. [1]

  3. Seven Cycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Cycles

    All Seven brand bikes are handmade in their Watertown factory. Seven also manufactures custom titanium stems and mountain bike handlebars, carbon fiber road forks, aluminum handlebars, stems, and seat posts. [2]

  4. Kestrel USA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kestrel_USA

    1986: Kestrel's first bicycle, the Kestrel 4000 road bike, is released, featuring all-carbon, fully aerodynamic frame design; 1986: Kestrel is the first in the industry to introduce bladder-molded monocoque carbon structures. 1988: The company unveils the "Nitro" full-suspension mountain bike after collaboration with Keith Bontrager

  5. The 10 Best Cheap E-Bikes, Determined By Our Testing and ...

    www.aol.com/9-best-cheap-e-bikes-154400410.html

    These are the 10 best cheap e-bikes—including fat tire, city, urban, folding, and ones that can reach 28 mph—costing $2,000 or less that you can buy right now. The 10 Best Cheap E-Bikes ...

  6. Rocky Mountain Bicycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocky_Mountain_Bicycles

    Rocky Mountain Bicycles had its beginnings in the basement of a Vancouver bike store called West Point Cycles. [1] It was in 1978 when two men began modifying Nishiki road bikes by adding wider tires, straight handlebars and internal five-speed gears.

  7. Flat bar road bike - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_bar_road_bike

    The drivetrain of a flat bar bike often borrows features from multiple bike styles, pairing the trigger-shifting approach of mountain bikes with the taller cassette ratios of road bikes. The brakes of purpose-built flat-bar designs tend to be linear-pull, a mechanism nonexistent in road bikes and largely displaced by discs with mountain bikes.