Interesting thread.. I'm intrigued to hear peoples' reasons for thier choices!
FWIW:
- Anything that could be considered a BSO on quality grounds
- Specialized because it appears they're fond of litigious, corporate bully-boy behaviour towards non-threatening smaller brands.. and now it's been mentioned I realise I also hate the name with it's wholly un-necessary use of the "z".
- Giant as I hate their (past, not sure about present) use of non-standard-ID seatposts tubes with pitifully short sleeves / shims, which I believe is what caused the premature death of my Giant frame.
- Boardman, sadly since as much as I love my example I've read reports of catastrophic steerer tube (and other) failures that Boardman /
Halfords have repeatedly tried to distance themselves from, while I don't trust 95% of Halfords employees to tie their own shoelaces without losing a finger.
These are just based on what I know; I suspect if my knowledge of the industry / manufacturers was better I'd have a much longer list.
It's funny / sad - in other parts of life where I have far more experience and understanding of the products on offer (and hence the ability to assess them fully and objectively myself) I've become very cynical due to many first hand experiences of utterly terrible quality and the manufacturers taking the pish out of their customers.
When I got back into cycling I approached it with a fresh, open mind, thinking "it's a far bigger market, the QC has to be better and the manufacture's integrity higher, the press more independent and objective", and took a lot of "reviews" at face value. However having read further and discovered less sugar-coated, more technically-oriented sources (including youtube channels such as Hambini and Luscher Technic) sadliy it seems that this industry is also rife with sub-par products being fobbed off on unwary customers using slick and deceptive marketing
I'm also losing respect for big-brand road bike manufacturers selling absolutely obscenely expensive bikes (maybe what, £5-6k+ as a watershed point; although I would / could never spend anywhere near this much personally). While I appreciate that as a business they'd be missing a trick for not supplying these markets, it serves as a painful reminder of the wealth inequality that's destroying the world and smacks of a certain cynicism that bike companies are willing to produce such poor-value items. On top of this I also find it somewhat offensive that even something as virtuous as the humble bicycle can be hi-jacked in the name of rampant profiteering and conspicuous consumption. Of course I might think differently if it was me pocketing what must be obscene margins associated with such products...
On a more pleasant note, recent problems notwithstanding the acqusition of a slow, basic bike has driven home to me that the only thing that really matters is getting out for a ride no matter what it's on, how much it cost, what brand it is or fast it goes.. so I'm certainly not a brand snob; just don't like people having my pants down.