I'm sure the quality is very high. Those Madison boys are clever fellowsMy Genesis is gorgeous and comfortable, I don't really care who/where/how it was madeIt's a unique spec in terms of components (well I'd be very surprised if the exact same spec was on the roads anywhere)
(I did get the frame reduced FWIW)
Madison also created Kryptonite locks,
http://www.ukbikesdepot.com/m90b185..._soGIjg_szW2qdhWVT_4MnlpRFieGztELoaAvCz8P8HAQThe best way to get value from a Genesis bike or frame is to wait for a sale. Then you can be sure that a nice chunk of those hidden profit margins are going into your pocket. Here's an example - a 2014 853 frameset with cro mo forks and headset for £349 http://www.ukbikesdepot.com/m90b185..._soGIjg_szW2qdhWVT_4MnlpRFieGztELoaAvCz8P8HAQ
and incestuous ime. The little frame shops do work for each other, the people move from one to another, and the mass market brands all come out of the same Taiwanese factories as everyoneelse's badge-engineered products.[/quote]The bike trade is sometimes very opaque. When I visited Dave Yates on my '80s Condor 753 I discovered he had built it.
My Genesis Equilibrium 853 is a thing of beauty. And as I built it myself, like yours, it is unique, And because the paintwork is so uninspiring to look at it is a good job its beauty is more than skin deep!My Genesis is gorgeous and comfortable, I don't really care who/where/how it was madeIt's a unique spec in terms of components (well I'd be very surprised if the exact same spec was on the roads anywhere)
(I did get the frame reduced FWIW)
[/QUOTE]Are you certain about that. iirc they date back at least as far as the 80's and were founded in the US
The best way to get value from any mass-market brand, and I doubt many Genesis buyers are under any illusion as to who and what Genesis are, is to do that. But you may find getting a frame that fits you to be a challenge.
and incestuous ime. The little frame shops do work for each other, the people move from one to another, and the mass market brands all come out of the same Taiwanese factories as everyoneelse's badge-engineered products.
Can't find one in the right shade, and the tyres and downtube are already a mismatch. I found a yellow tape that matches but don't have the stones for that. And I like leather tape and for tape to match the saddle.Green tape would improve yours![]()
http://www.kryptonitelock.com/en/our-story/company-history.html[/QUOTE]Re Kryptonite, I actually had to go to a tumbledown hovel in Sheffield in the early 80s to buy the U shaped bits of steel from a one man band. I still feel ashamed about the way we screwed the poor bugger down on price. We encouraged the perception that Kryptonite was a US brand - perceived value etc. We also drafted the terms of the guarantee so carefully that it was virtually impossible for anyone to claim if their lock had been cut and their bike stolen.
Yours looks more like the flagship than mine does! Though maybe the battleship grey is meant to do the flagship thing.Nothing uninspiring here colour wise (IMO)
I really must get some better photos!
Now that would not surprise me at all.I've just been looking at that! I know we got them made here, printed the packaging here etc. We must have done it under licence. It was in 1984.
The grey was chosen to go with the Genesis lettering...my views on black are well documented! The saddle cost me £80 (and is a SpecializedYours looks more like the flagship than mine does! Though maybe the battleship grey is meant to do the flagship thing.