SunTour Derailleurs I Own Right Now

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midlife

Legendary Member
Aim high..... Sugino 75 :smile:
 

Gravity Aided

Legendary Member
Location
Land of Lincoln
suntour-derailleur-2.jpg

Still working on getting this one all polished, still has a little rouge and a little rust on it, then it returns to the otherwise all Campagnolo Corso.

Suntour Honor, 1970's.
 

Rockn Robin

Senior Member
Location
Arizona
Right now, I have five SunTour rear derailleurs in my collection so far. I'm working on trying to add more. I have a V Luxe, two Vx, Cyclone standard (black), Cyclone 6000, and Cyclone 7000. I am working on getting more in my parts collection.

A number of years ago I had a SunTour derailleur on a mountain bike. It worked very well. Never had to get it adjusted. I haven't seen any on the newer bikes today. Are they still in business?
 

Alan O

Über Member
Location
Liverpool
A number of years ago I had a SunTour derailleur on a mountain bike. It worked very well. Never had to get it adjusted. I haven't seen any on the newer bikes today. Are they still in business?
"SunTour (Maeda) was the most important Japanese manufacturer of bicycle components based in Osaka until 1988, when Sakae Ringyo Company (abbreviated S.R.), a major Japanese maker of aluminum parts, particularly cranks and seat posts, bought what was left of the bankrupt SunTour, and the combined companies are now known as SR-SunTour. SunTour reached a zenith of sales and commercial success from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SunTour

Reading further on, it looks like SR really only bought the name. So no, the SunTour that we knew and loved is no more.
 
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midlife

Legendary Member
"SunTour (Maeda) was the most important Japanese manufacturer of bicycle components based in Osaka until 1988, when Sakae Ringyo Company (abbreviated S.R.), a major Japanese maker of aluminum parts, particularly cranks and seat posts, bought what was left of the bankrupt SunTour, and the combined companies are now known as SR-SunTour. SunTour reached a zenith of sales and commercial success from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SunTour

Reading further on, it looks like SR really only bought the name. So no, the SunTour that we knew and loved is no more.

Its not surprising Sun Tour went west..... There's a good write up on the Internet somewhere explaining how it all went wrong.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Didn't they spend all their money developing a superb professional group set, which they priced too cheap and which nobody beloved could be any good, so it flopped?
 

Rockn Robin

Senior Member
Location
Arizona
"SunTour (Maeda) was the most important Japanese manufacturer of bicycle components based in Osaka until 1988, when Sakae Ringyo Company (abbreviated S.R.), a major Japanese maker of aluminum parts, particularly cranks and seat posts, bought what was left of the bankrupt SunTour, and the combined companies are now known as SR-SunTour. SunTour reached a zenith of sales and commercial success from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SunTour

Reading further on, it looks like SR really only bought the name. So no, the SunTour that we knew and loved is no more.

Sad to see them go. They did indeed make good gear.
 

8mph

Veteran
Location
Devon
I have Accushift bar end shifters, XC pro hubs and 7 speed freewheel on my touring bike. The derailleur is Shimano XT however.
 
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