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This page lists notable bicycle brands and manufacturing companies past and present. For bicycle parts, see List of bicycle part manufacturing companies.. Many bicycle brands do not manufacture their own product, but rather import and re-brand bikes manufactured by others (e.g., Nishiki), sometimes designing the bike, specifying the equipment, and providing quality control.
Polygon Bikes is a bicycle's trade name made by PT Insera Sena, an Indonesian bicycle manufacturer based in Sidoarjo, East Java. Polygon operates manufacturing facilities in various places in Indonesia. [1] Polygon has a globally connected design team, and commonly used as sponsor and its bike in bicycle competition. [2] [3]
A clincher bicycle tire mounted on a wheel A cross section of a clincher tire with a puncture-preventing layer (in blue) between the casing and the tread An inner tube rolled up for storage or to be carried as a spare. A bicycle tire is a tire that fits on the wheel of a bicycle or similar vehicle.
Best Canadian Tire bikes under $250 Supercycle Tekoa Hardtail Mountain Bike, 24-in. ... The "quality of the bike is amazing and [it] doesn't break the bank," writes one Canadian Tire reviewer ...
KHS Bicycles is a bicycle manufacturer founded in 1974 with main operations in the United States and Taiwan.Its bicycles are distributed in over 30 countries. [1] Although KHS' main focus has been in mountain bikes, it has offerings in road bikes, folding bikes, tandem bikes, cruiser bikes (under the Manhattan brand name), single speed bikes and BMX bikes (under the FreeAgent brand name).
Sam Reynolds (Polygon Bikes) Brett Rheeder (Trek) Nicholi Rogatkin (Specialized) Brandon Semenuk (Trek) Wade Simmons (Rocky Mountain) Martin Söderström (Specialized/Red Bull) Kurt Sorge (Evil Bikes) Cameron Zink (YT/Monster Energy)
The fitness and cadence of the rider, bicycle tire pressure and sizes, gear ratios, slope of the terrain affect the overall speed of the rider. A person pedalling with 100 W power can achieve 5.5 m/s on a roadster, 7.5 m/s on a racing bicycle, 10 m/s with a faired HPV and 14 m/s with an ultimate HPV.
When Cohen Sr. died in 1963, Howie Cohen traveled to Japan to find new sources for bicycles, [1] and especially, a Japanese bicycle factory capable of producing high quality bikes that would be welcomed by U.S. independent bike dealers and the bicycling community; bicycles that would be able to compete with American and European-built bicycles.