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  2. Schwinn Bicycle Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwinn_Bicycle_Company

    Schwinn did allow some dealers to sell imported road racing bikes, and by 1973 was using the Schwinn name on the Le Tour, a Japanese-made low-cost sport/touring 10-speed bicycle. Schwinn developed strong trading relationships with two Japanese bicycle manufacturers in particular, Bridgestone and (via its bicycling arm) Panasonic. Though these ...

  3. Klein Bicycle Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klein_Bicycle_Corporation

    Klein was a bicycle company founded by Gary Klein that pioneered the use of large diameter aluminium alloy tubes for greater stiffness and lower weight.. Klein produced his first bicycle frames while a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology during the 1970s, and full production runs of frames began in the 1980s.

  4. Centurion (bicycle company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centurion_(bicycle_company)

    According to Frank J. Berto, [2] [3] Raleigh Industries of America had been looking at a Japanese source for their Grand Prix model. Raleigh America ordered 2,000 bicycles from Tano and Company of Osaka but their parent company in England, TI-Raleigh, disapproved — concerned that the Tano-built bikes were too well made and would have outsold their own British bikes.

  5. GT Bicycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GT_Bicycles

    GT Avalanche 1.0. GT Bicycles, Inc. is an American company that designs and manufactures BMX, mountain, and road bicycles. GT is a division of the Dutch conglomerate Pon Holdings, which also markets Cannondale, Schwinn, Mongoose, IronHorse, DYNO, and RoadMaster bicycle brands; all manufactured in Asia.

  6. List of Japanese bicycle brands and manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_bicycle...

    American Eagle, later Nishiki (a line of bikes manufactured for export into the US by Kobe-based Kawamura Cycle Company from 1965 until 1989; owned by WCC, West Coast Cycle) American Star (a brand manufactured in Japan in the 1960s and early 1970s [9]) Apollo (a Canadian brand manufactured by Kuwahara, marketed by Fred Deeley Imports of Vancouver)

  7. Schwinn Paramount - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwinn_Paramount

    A growing number of teens and young adults were purchasing imported European sport racing or sport touring bicycles, many fitted with multiple derailleur-shifted gears. Schwinn decided to meet the challenge by developing two lines of sport or road 'racer' bicycles. One was already in the catalog — the limited production Paramount series.

  8. Montague Bikes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montague_Bikes

    In 1989, Montague sold around 2,200 BiFrames worldwide. [4] While producing the BiFrame design, Montague worked closely with the Schwinn Bicycle Company , and in 1991 the Schwinn Montague M1000 was first marketed and sold through Schwinn dealers.

  9. Giant Bicycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Bicycles

    ] A major breakthrough came in 1977 when Giant's chief executive, Tony Lo, negotiated a deal with Schwinn to begin manufacturing bikes as an OEM, manufacturing bicycles to be sold exclusively under other brand names as a private label. As bike sales increased in the U.S., and after workers at the Schwinn plant in Chicago went on strike in 1980 ...

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