When comparing cycling to other industries, I assume that the next "innovation" will be some kind of subscription model: You'll get a certain amount of free shifts per month and if you exceed that, you either have to upgrade to a premium subscription or watch an ad on your bike computer
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
lol nice 😂😂
@rcdogmanduh44406 ай бұрын
Shhhhhhh, don't get them thinking!
@simonstucki6 ай бұрын
I quess you'll still be able to shift manually but for the AI enhanced auto smart shift you have to pay a monthly subscription fee.
@american_psycho11476 ай бұрын
You tried too hard to be funny
@progrockUSA6 ай бұрын
Piracy becomes rampant in the cycling industry suddenly.
@burgess_and_his_bike6 ай бұрын
How this hasn’t absolutely popped off is criminal. Well done dudes
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Haha thank you, glad you like it!
@RHelenius6 ай бұрын
Because cutting to a face talking all the time is obnoxious.
@burgess_and_his_bike6 ай бұрын
@@RHelenius haha okay bro I dunno what else you expect from KZbin but these videos often have a face. Jog on.
@RHelenius6 ай бұрын
@@burgess_and_his_bike Not liking the truth, bro?
@burgess_and_his_bike6 ай бұрын
@@RHelenius it literally does not impact me at all. I do not care what you think, like, at all chief.
@evelknievel20003 ай бұрын
Riding my 1972 Peugeot PX10 on a weekly basis I can only say the old steel bicycles are so much more fun to ride than the carbon ones. For me it’s not about speed anymore and my bike and outfit give a lot of spontaneous reactions and nice conversations during my rides. Sold my carbon in april after gathering dust for 4 years and haven’t missed it for a second.
@DPR11386 ай бұрын
I think the tour should have a retro stage where they ride single speed bikes for the day.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
That would be gnarly!!
@larchman43276 ай бұрын
Yeah the kind where you stop and flip the rear tire around to change to a slightly different gear.
@GeoAce7776 ай бұрын
RAD idea!!!!😎
@james-p6 ай бұрын
I like it! Plus wool jerseys!
@Bernholesurfer6 ай бұрын
@@larchman4327 gears?, ride it fixed gear and brakeless like the first years! jk
@christopherwebb35176 ай бұрын
The weight of the first Tour de France winning bike is the equivalent of riding a modern bike with two more modern bikes strapped to your back.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Haha for real, that’s a crazy way to think about it!
@yukiko_50516 ай бұрын
And on fixed drivetrain no less!
@angelicafernandez98316 ай бұрын
@@yukiko_5051 Superior fix gear
@casasecranks6 ай бұрын
I think the biggest weight difference could be on some riders ;)
@gordonanderson31116 ай бұрын
I love how the first winning bike with a brake lever has the cable running UNDER the handlebar tape - a cool feature that would not return until about 1985!
@paulontheroad6 ай бұрын
I’m sure you spent many hours researching this so you deserve a Hearty Well Done!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Hey I appreciate it, thank you!
@Chiller116 ай бұрын
No R in Peugeot. Cervelo is Canadian not European. 13:40
@xGshikamaru6 ай бұрын
And 7:20 Mercier is French, not Italian
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you!
@aemediainc6 ай бұрын
“Was” Canadian
@ianwhitehead30866 ай бұрын
@@aemediainceh?
@aemediainc6 ай бұрын
@@ianwhitehead3086 eh. Been sold at least once and current owner is Dutch. Pon holdings owns bicycle brands Caloi, Cannondale, Cervélo, Derby Cycle (owner of Focus), GT, Gazelle, IronHorse, Kalkhoff, Mongoose, Santa Cruz, Veloretti, and Schwinn, among others.
@ditto19586 ай бұрын
Peugeot was actually a relatively well-known bike brand back in the 70’s.
@perryvath76176 ай бұрын
I rode a PX-10
@jacobusdegroot75576 ай бұрын
And 80's.
@returnofthenative6 ай бұрын
Indeed, my wife, then girlfriend was riding a Peugot, it was a a RR town bike with price to match. Heavy, but very good. I was riding my 1973 Motobecane Grand Record, Brooks swallow, Campagnolo Record that I replaced about 1980 with Super Record. Man that Campag tool box cost as much as the bike, I still ride, & nowadays I have a sensational collection.
@cra_556 ай бұрын
Plenty of old chromoly steel Peugeot frames are still on the roads in Europe
@festerofest43746 ай бұрын
As a kid starting to love bicycles in the early 70's I lusted after the Schwinn Paramounts in the bike store rack.
@1shelbygt076 ай бұрын
Thanks for providing some very interesting history. I’m 80 and have loved cycling since I was a kid. My first good bike was a Raleigh Superbe. A very pretty bike in all gold. I then moved on to a Trek 2300, a carbon fiber tube bike with aluminum lugs. Next I bought a Trek LeMond Chambery. This is the most attractive bike I own. Last I bought a Trek Lance Armstrong 1999 US Postal Commemorative bike. This hangs on my wall never having been ridden. It’s been a great life and much of this I owe to cycling.
@bendenisereedy78656 ай бұрын
Read The Midlife Cyclist by Phil Cavell and you'll be taking that bike off the wall and riding it again.
@lesbois536 ай бұрын
@@1shelbygt07 hi mate. I am also 80, and I have never given up cycling. In fact, I have just done a 20 k ride. Some days I do less. I still have most of my old bikes which all work. My latest squeeze is a Look 765 Optimum roadbike, with Shimano Ultegra Di2 wireless shifters, disc brakes,the lot. It has given me a whole new lease of cycling life! Like riding on a cloud! Try it! It works! It will be a great life again!
@lfdavis6 ай бұрын
Kudos to you 80 year olds from a 72 year old with 40+ years of cycling. You guys are my heroes.
@lesbois536 ай бұрын
@@lfdavis keep on treading! It never ends!
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
@@lesbois53 my 78 year old friend climbs Mt. Diablo in the SF Bay Area every week. And in a month, I will be riding two weeks in Slovenia with my 82 year old neighbor who is also the assistant ride leader. Excellent examples in health and living life to the fullest. A lifelong cyclist, I learned to unicycle just before turning 50. At almost 59, I'm still bunny hopping, trials riding, wheelieing, "shredding the gnar" and keeping the rubber side down. Road, mountain, single, or tandem, it's ALL fun! Hope to keep it up much, much longer! Kudos to you and everyone else who keeps those wheels spinning! PS I'd LOVE to see your old bicycle collection. Hard to let them go, right?
@faustocopious5 ай бұрын
Eddy rode Eddy Merckx-labeled bikes from Masi (1969), then Giuseppe Pela (1970), then Colnago, Kessels, and De Rosa. His own bike company started after he retired, in 1980.
@PhillipMoore-vj6cc4 ай бұрын
I still have my 1975 Peugeot PX 10, with the gold drilled Mafac brakes, and Simplex/Stronglight drive train. Bernard Thevenet won the Tour du France on this bike in 1975. It was definitely the fastest bike back in the day, and can keep up with my Specialized Tarmac Pro carbon fiber, Dura Ace with Boyds 60mm carbon wheels. I was soooooo much faster in 1975. LOL Time is always the winner.
@borderlands66066 ай бұрын
The golden age for me was when Tour bikes resembled those ordinary club riders owned. The difference between an off the peg Reynolds, Tange or Columbus steel tubed bike, and one made for professionals was minimal. It was a cheap sport for working people.
@CharlesG-d7q2 ай бұрын
we now need the 24h lemons but with bikes... you can spend at maximum 50€ on your race bike (lemons, not le mans nor le monds)
@sillysmeagma422Ай бұрын
@@CharlesG-d7q id say $1000
@CharlesG-d7qАй бұрын
@@sillysmeagma422 Man the car version is $500, maybe $100-$200 would be more realistic for bikes (At least where I live you can find something like a 2000s road bike in working condition for that amount). $1000 would be reasonable if you have to buy new bikes, if that's what you mean
@sillysmeagma422Ай бұрын
@CharlesG-d7q for the car version you can sell of extra parts and dont have to include cost of safety features which makes it easier to get that price
@gerade-aus5 күн бұрын
Hear, hear! I have asked for steel frame homologation since 1998, when the Fondriest Toplite was the apex of steel steel frame technology.
@MAXPAUERv6 ай бұрын
11:05 that Bianchi bike... So many memories, rest in peace Pirate
@mikemalloy16815 ай бұрын
Well, I go back to toe straps and leather helmets in the early to middle 1970s. I would like to add, NO ONE wore a helmet during training. MASI, was the premier bike. It cost a whopping $750.00 USD. Man, what a bike. Then there was a black frame bike that was suppose to be super light, but very brittle. They had one hanging on the wall of the bike shop here in Corpus Christi. It was called "space age" material. Still riding, but now on a hard tail because it is safer for me, to keep me from falling. Age is 76. When I had my hip replaced even the doctor could not believe how fast I recovered. Biking has more benefits than you might know. The morning of my surgery I was out doing an easy 4 miles just to loosen up. Took about a week to get back on.
@Rekmeyata5 ай бұрын
I go back to that time too, I've been riding for just over 50 years, I still have some bikes with toe straps on them, but I no longer have the proper shoe with the proper cleat, so I just use freestyle shoes for those. Those cleats are still available but I don't ride them enough to care. I saw those leather helmets on a few riders, but I never got one because I knew they were worthless in a crash so why buy one?! But a few years after I started seriously riding I got a Bell Biker helmet when it came out in the mid-70s, that was actually a good helmet, it just didn't have the airflow that more modern ones had, but the outer plastic covering was tough as nails not like that thin crap we have today, of course, the Biker did weigh more than modern helmets mostly because of the thick outer plastic covering, but I was young, the weight didn't bother me.
@SkarTisu6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! I’ve got some more information on Greg LeMond’s Tour winning bikes 1986: Bernard Hinault branded steel frame for flat stages, Look/TVT carbon for mountain stages - both using Campagnolo components 1989: Bottechia steel frame using Mavic components 1990: TVT carbon using Campagnolo components
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Great insights, thanks for sharing!
@christopheroliver1486 ай бұрын
Was the 1986 bike a Roland Della Santa under the paint?
@ttnyny6 ай бұрын
In 1986, on the final stage into Paris, I saw LeMond ride across le Pont de la Concorde. But it all happened so quickly that I could not spot the details of the frame of his bike. I certainly could not see through the paint.
@andrewgoddard33506 ай бұрын
Love those old pictures of the riders having a cigarette....crazy
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Nutty!!
@racebiketuner6 ай бұрын
Ha ha ha. You used to see that in World Motocross too.
@lfdavis6 ай бұрын
They would also stop in to a restaurant and pick up a few bottles of wine and share them.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
It was believed that smoking helped "expand your lungs" so you could breathe more easily.
@keithhunter39105 ай бұрын
Yes, you must open your lungs before you get to higher altitude.
@gam14715 ай бұрын
I enjoyed your presentation very much, thank you. I'd like to add something which I hope will be of interest. When we talk about top quality steel frames used for racing, they are actually steel alloys. In 1897, Alfred Milward Reynolds found that increasing the thickness of light gauge steel tubing at stress points overcame the problem of buckling at these points. This is the famous butting process, in which the thickness of the tubing is increased where needed but without increasing the overall tube diameter. In 1935, the famous Reynolds 531 tubing, an alloy of manganese, molybdenum and steel was introduced. Combined with the butting process, this was a highly significant development for lightweight frames. The alloy improves properties of the metal such retention of its properties after brazing. The later Reynolds 753 is also a manganese-molybdenum alloy steel, but with enhanced properties such as strength and torsional rigidity. Many Tour de France winning bike frames have been built using Reynolds 531. It has also been used in aircraft and Jaguar's famous E-type sports car. For those wishing to know more, there's plenty on the internet about Reynolds tubing.
@maxt16175 ай бұрын
What a great video! I know a little about past eras and you managed to cover a lot of ground in a short time whilst also going into some smaller details. The YT algorithm kept on suggesting this vid for weeks... and sure enough 158k views! Well done!!
@davidkaul61804 ай бұрын
Chrome molobiium was extremely strong and light and used on frames in the 80s and 90s
@briz19656 ай бұрын
I rode my Peugeot 979 with pride, I think dura ace ax was the dogs. Can't work out why it cost me @£750 back in 1986 to have a decent bike with brand new campy group set. Today it appears fashionable only to buy a bike over $10,000. Then stay in the big ring. I don't see the hype, it is the rider.
@TPetroch6 ай бұрын
Fascinating history lesson gents! Really enjoyed it, well done 👍🚴🏽♂️
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@mihaelverk95076 ай бұрын
very insightful video, especially the evolution of gear changes was really cool i did expect more pictures of the winnig bikes tho, as if something in the title promised that there would be a list of bikes by year
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Gal you enjoyed it! That was the initial plan, but ended up being a bit tough to track down, so went with more of the overview approach
@mihaelverk95076 ай бұрын
@@99spokes yea i was guessing this was the case, maybe teh solution could be to have a slide at the end of each era with the pictures you were able to find (like 4-6 different winning bikes) so that we get some visual queues and then the differences in the next era are easier to spot
@gerryc31126 ай бұрын
@@mihaelverk9507 Just trying to be helpful, it is "visual CUES".
@mihaelverk95076 ай бұрын
@@gerryc3112 hahahaha fair enough, thx
@PBRStreetgang666 ай бұрын
pretty sure that back in the stone ages they did not move their chain over, as you stated, but used a "flip-flop" hub with 2 different cogs on the rear wheel. THey then undid the massive wingnuts holding the wheel on (by hand), turned the wheel around, and put the chain back on. Maybe that last bit is what you were referring to, but to me it sounded like you implied that they moved the chain over to a different gear, which would be on the front chainrings, not on the rear cogs which were, as I mentioned, flip-flopped. Just want folks to have a clear picture of what these folks endured for their sport.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you!
@highlyreg6 ай бұрын
I've always been looking for a video like this.
@RichardRosenthal-gu7zs6 ай бұрын
The internet and KZbin is rife with duplicates. This is more than interesting and very well researched, written, and produced; it is, insofar as I know, a truly singular exposition of bikes in the history of the Tour. Chapeau! One addition I would make: I think there have been some number of "winning bikes" that were re-decaled to carry a sponsor's name but were built by others. Craig Calfee built LeMond's first winning carbon frame. (John Slawta of Land Shark built Andy Hampsten's re-decaled, Giro "winning" frame.) (And congratulations to you again for stating bikes don't win; riders do. Having created the advertising for Campagnolo, Continental, Basso, et al., it unfailingly galls me to see ads that speak of products winning.)
@99spokes5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! And thanks for the feedback!
@Jason-iy8zt6 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. It was fascinating, and it must have taken a long time to do the research.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it, thank you!
@gordonwallin23686 ай бұрын
Fascinating! I'm an old fat motorcyclist, but the speeds that some of my friend go on their bicycles is amazing. My bike will do an easy 280kph, but anyone who does over 70kph just, even the thought terrifies me. And they've been down hill at over 110kph. Ahh! Those TdF bicycles are just like science fiction. Cheers from the Pacific West Coast of Canada.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
Was descending a pass at Lake Tahoe 20 years ago on our mountain tandem. Had no expectation of going too fast. Then a dude on a motorcycle sidles up beside us and shouts, "Good job guys! You're doing 55!" Nice! (55mph is 88kph) Not.even.trying. I know we've hit over 65mph on the road tandem (104kph) And the Flexy Racer as a kid? Pretty sure I topped 70 on that insane death trap!!!! Not sure I'll be hitting those speeds again though...
@EdwardBrewer-ku5dm6 ай бұрын
Great video; you covered a lot of ground in a short time without feeling rushed. I want to point out that all metals used in bike frames are alloy, not just aluminum. Alloy is simply a mix of more than one metal. Steel, aluminum, titanium, magnesium, and any other metals I missed, are all mixed with small amounts of other metals and therefore, are alloys. And I don't know how I have missed videos from 99 Spokes up until now, I will be subscribing!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
True! Here in the US many manufacturers refer to their aluminum models as “alloy,” so that’s the vernacular we’ve stuck with, albeit it not the most literally accurate haha
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
@@99spokes I'll attest to "alloy" being the equivalent of "aluminum" in the US bike scene for a long time. "Alloy nipples" is still the standard term for aluminum.
@jeremynorth5 ай бұрын
Brilliant summary. I think the only thing you didn't mention in the innovations was the QR skewer which was the start of Campagnolo as a bike brand, Tullio having found the butterfly nut difficult to undo with cold hands.
@99spokes5 ай бұрын
Good call, thanks for adding that!
@kelalamusic92583 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video. Each year if the tour, bikes are very much the same across the board. If there’s an innovation, you can bet all teams are on it. So, it’s not so much the bike that wins a race, but the rider sitting on it. Let’s not forget that. 😊
@99spokes3 ай бұрын
Absolutely!! Hence 00:38 haha
@Emlizardo6 ай бұрын
Absolutely superb job - thank you!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@paulmcleod25476 ай бұрын
I feel the need to complement the presenter on his clear precise articulate expressions. Good job.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Haha thank you! It was a fun one to work on, I learned a lot!
@nigelgibson6235 ай бұрын
I agree. He did an excellent job!
@SuperMario-hl7jo4 ай бұрын
Hi nice vid, just a bit of info; Merckx's Faema was made by Masi, 1st Molteni Merckx was made by Kessels, then Colnago and finally De Rosa. Fiat Merckx made by De Rosa. In 88 Delgado actually rode a TVT badged Pinarello most of the time. Le Mond won 89 TVT (Badged Bottecchia) and 90 TVT (Badged Le Mond), Indurain on TVT in 91 and maybe 92 (can't recall) badged Pinarello. Indurain's steel bikes by Dario Pegoretti. As a side note, Stephen Roche was the last winner on a LUGGED steel frame with toe clips. Keep up the good work!
@99spokes4 ай бұрын
Right on, thank you for sharing!!
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
I think I observed STI prototypes at the 1987 Tour in Stuttgart. If memory serves, I was mystified by the extra cable housing extending from the brake hoods. But that was a long time ago and I may be mistaken.
@w.griffioen6 ай бұрын
At 14:16 it's stated that the Tour was won on a Pinarello bike from 2012 to 2019, however the Tour of 2014 was won on a Specialized bike.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you!
@charlesfosterkane80346 ай бұрын
1956 Tour De France was won by Roger Walkowiak riding a Riva Sport bicycle built by Alphonse Thomann who built several TDF bicycles. I own a 1956 frame built by Riva Sport Cycles. It has Vitus tubing and Nervex Lugs. I set this frame up as fixed gear with a rim choice that will support large tires. I run 33cm tires. i ride this bicycle regularly and is a great ride. Btw, it was 1965 that Gimondi rode the Bianchi with all the new Campagnolo parts like new hub and brakes. Great video and thanks
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Nice, thanks for sharing!!
@JuCarlos-ex8ipАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing such amazing video bicycles in Colombia 🇨🇴 are like our girlfriends. We go with them everywhere
@99spokesАй бұрын
Haha awesome, thanks for chiming in!
@mylittlepitbull31436 ай бұрын
You showed my Merckx I rode the Eddy for 8 years and 300 races. Couple of different wheel sets. I also had a really nice Frejus from the early '60s. That was one of the best riding bikes I've ever had. But I've owned every kind of bike so I guess I can just keep going.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
That’s awesome!!
@daven.76856 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Fascinating!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@984francis6 ай бұрын
My 10 speed custom built Renolds 531 road bike (by Mike Coward of Emperor Sport, South London) weighed 16lb in 1980. So the Lemond carbon bike was no lighter. Many think that the combination of high Young's modulus and tensile strength of alloy steel is still the best all around material.
@fiddleronthebike6 ай бұрын
the BMC you show at 14'04" is - as you said - equipped with Shimano Dura Ace DI2, but the BMC that Cadel Evans rides in the picture before has a Campagnolo group set
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Whoops! Tricky finding the correct photos, thanks for the correction!
@TheExposerofLies5 ай бұрын
Great information. It's the old adage, "A rider can't ride without a bike and a bike can't move without a rider.
@KevinKimmich440246 ай бұрын
Good job with this video. Very entertaining review of this history. Bike tech is a pretty good reminder of how recent the industrial/technological society really is.... The first bike type thing, really like a balance bike for kids made of wood was what 1877? Then the safety bicycle is 1880s... then they're racing the TdF in early 1900s! Then I actually lived and road and raced bikes through late 1980s and 1990s when all the experimenting was going on. My first real road racing bike was a steel frame with downtube shifters and toe clips. I swapped the toe clips for clipless pedals maybe one season later, then STI swept away the downtube shifters in no time too, then much better helmets wiped away the classic hairnets. There were vast dumpsters filled with failed bike junk in those years too, like biopace chainrings. The bike tech of the 80s mirrored the innovation in other industries too. Back then people were really cognizant, I think that they were living in "the future", I remember it, and can recognize that type of thinking when I watch TV shows and movies from back then.
@jimmyjakes18236 ай бұрын
I still have the biopace rings on my Schwinn Voyageur, lol. I've done tens of thousands of miles on them over the last few decades, so hearing they're junk is always news to me because I never had a problem with them. Never bothered upgrading to special fancy shoes either, and I'm still using downtube shifters. Not to critique your post, but I don't think the racer based tech filtering down onto recreational riders has necessarily been a good thing, other than for bike companies. If you're a pro that's one thing, but what has pushing all these chubby, non-athletes into neon spandex and onto bikes with harsh racing geometry really accomplished, aside from the comedic factor? The dumpsters of the future will be fill with carbon fiber bikes because they're too risky to ride used, while any 1970's Raleigh frame will still be safe to ride 100 years from now. Was the 3lbs or whatever difference between a good steel frame and carbon fiber really worth it?
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
@@jimmyjakes1823 spandex has NOTHING to do with racing. It's function. I've decided that the shunning of Lycra in the mountain bike community is horrible. I've been cycling in Lycra for 45 years. I live in a hot climate. I also "run hot," so riding in "baggies" is stupid. I just spent a week in the Sierra where temps were 85-90. Climbing 1,800 feet of technical Sierra single track baking in the sun? Sorry, won't be wearing gym shorts for ya! Simply too hot for me to wear clothing based on "fashion sense" instead of FUNCTION. So I'm wearing Lyra with pride. This is EXACTLY what American football payers wear - and they don't have a chamois to cover their "bits," so I'm less "out there" than the beloved "studs" on the football field. But that won't stop your average male pickup truck driver from shouting "fag" at cyclists as he passes them dangerously close to get home to watch football! So stop the Lycra bashing. It's not for "racing," but for those cycling long and hard hours on the bike who need FUNCTION over anything else. And I also don't buy into the endless shaming of the male physique. Terrible side-effect of some great strides for gender equality. I'd prefer the latter without the former, thank you.
@jimmyjakes18236 ай бұрын
@@dudeonbike800 I'm shocked you got the f word through moderation. That aside, those truckers are only standing up for good taste and public aesthetics. Imagine driving along, minding your own business until suddenly you see some appalling, fat middle aged man bent all the way over and stuffed into neon spandex, that's covered in obnoxious advertisements. Of course the truck driver will be traumatized. What did they do to deserve that? Is it any wonder people sneer at cyclists when we behave this way? Look, maybe we can find some middle ground here? I do ride with black shorts and a solid colored riding shirt, but only in hot weather and only on randonneur rides or extended multi day tours. Even then, I'll throw on basketball shorts if I'm going to spend time off the bike in civilization, and of course I'm not wearing ridiculous clippy shoes either. This seems reasonable to me. Fundamentally, this idea that you need special riding clothes to go for a 20 mile ride on a nice day is totally absurd. Cycling is a normal activity that normal people should be able to do without dressing up like power rangers.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
@@jimmyjakes1823 I'm glad I was able to quote the homophobia RAMPANT in our country. Why censor the truth? Apparently you haven't been any of the THOUSANDS of Walmarts, Dollar Stores or other mass merchant retailers across the country in the last ten years. Endless trauma as far as the eye can see. Obesity is epidemic. Stop playing the victim. Or perhaps you should promulgate legislation that dictates who should be allowed to wear what sort of clothing. Been using "clippy shoes" for 37 years and appreciate them on every ride. After using flats, then toe clips & straps, then toe clips with cleats and then toe clips with double straps, I found the most ideal solution: The Clipless Pedal. They're so good for me I even use them on my urban assault vehicle. Not only tandem riding, but tandem mountain biking. Haven't dropped my partner in 30 years. They aren't for everyone (many get scared riding with them), so I don't fault others who choose alternatives. I wonder why you feel the need to? Been riding in "normal" clothing for 51 years. Yet when I want to ride more than what normal clothing would be conducive to wear, I pick the more appropriate choice. Why would I play soccer in slacks and dance shoes? Your endless moaning is hilarious. Explains a lot of douchery among idiot cyclists I see and hear about. You've obviously forgotten what cycling is and should be all about.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
@@jimmyjakes1823 I'll add that it's funny you make the SAME false conclusions that cycling-ignorant members of the public make: "That cyclist MUST be wearing Lycra to 'shove it in our faces,' as that clothing obviously serves no purpose other than to show off and pretend to be a 'racer'." Amazing that you cannot comprehend why cyclists choose appropriate clothing. I've corresponded with a BUNCH of motorcyclists who simply cannot believe we scream down mountains "practically naked." The Lycra skin suit is indeed useless when the worst occurs. They recoil in horror imagining the road rash we'll get if things go wrong. But then I point out that I'd never GET TO THE TOP OF THAT EPIC CLIMB wearing leathers in the first place. So I'd never get the opportunity to UTILIZE the leathers on the screaming descent. Kinda makes 'em moot. Once I explain this, the light bulb comes on. They then get it. I wonder if your light bulb will ever come on?
@Oldgames10006 ай бұрын
Nibali was on a specialized tarmac in 2014.
@kaiserinslo15065 ай бұрын
Good job, nice presentation. 😀
@gordonanderson31116 ай бұрын
To change gears on old pre-war bikes you had to take off the rear wheel and turn it around to use the sprocket on the other side of the hub. I had a couple very old bikes with this feature, threads for gears on both sides of the hub. Some had a freewheel on one side and fixed, track style, gear on the other.
@philippejoseph86045 ай бұрын
Very good job, never seen before I think, bravo !!! I just loved the first 2/3 of the video, too good the performances of the cyclist at that time with "only" cofee and wine as doping substances.
@99spokes5 ай бұрын
Thank you, glad you enjoyed it! Definitely simpler times back then haha
@鄭振華3 ай бұрын
噢啊呦 ,環法大賽 !真是 PRO 級的職業戰 ,To de France ,平常我就四處遊走超低空飛行自由車 。
@willbick78896 ай бұрын
Wonderful photos!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you liked them!
@TheCrushah6 ай бұрын
Pogacar is riding 165mm cranks this tour. More aero, less hip flexion, higher cadence. Seems to be working well so far.
@einundsiebenziger54886 ай бұрын
Pogacar himself is only 176 cm tall. If you are over 180 cm the "less hip flexion" thing does not apply, any supposed aero benefit is negligible and if you are already used to pedal fast (+90 rpm) there is no need to go any faster. Short cranks are a fad, probably even more than oval chainrings.
@jazzcatjohn6 ай бұрын
until next year
@roadcyclist16 ай бұрын
@einundsiebenziger5488 Yes, of course, you know more than tadej and his entire team tasked with giving him every benefit possible. Zzz
@l.d.t.63276 ай бұрын
@@roadcyclist1Vingegaard uses 172,5 in the 2 tours he won. Goes to show it’s all relative and rider - dependent.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
I'm 175cm tall and have been mountain biking with 175mm cranks for 35 years. Road riding with 172.5mm. Seems to be working well so far. (I laugh at all the crank strike marks on rocks on the trails - lots yesterday in Tahoe. Apparently people don't know about this thing called "technique" while riding off road.) My 190cm friend has been road & track riding with custom 198mm cranks for the same time to avoid previous injury caused by short (180mm) cranks. Seems to be working well so far.
@chriskappert13654 ай бұрын
I still own my 1981 Team Raleigh copy of Zoetemelks bike . Only difference mine has Campagnolo Record where Zoetemelk used the Super Record group . It weighs 9.1 kilogram !
@GreenViper-d4w4 ай бұрын
I have one from the late 1970s I’ve had it since new and love it
@maxandfergus6 ай бұрын
Loved this video! Period.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it, thanks!
@Jari19736 ай бұрын
Was a really good video 👍
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@lucwijngaard84136 ай бұрын
A fun fact I read was that the Enve bikes used by Total Energies this TDF had mounts for mudshields, contrary to all the other bikes used in the peloton!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Sorry to hear that, thanks for sharing your expereince!
@christopheroliver1483 ай бұрын
Funny thing in that picture of Pedro Delgado and Stephen Roche @10:06 is that Roche has Peugeot branding on his shorts, but he is riding a Battaglin branded frame. Can anyone tell me the story here?
@99spokes3 ай бұрын
They really have!!
@davidschaadt34606 ай бұрын
Wonderful program
@gregfloh77325 ай бұрын
Interesting infos. Thank you!!
@daveanolik88376 ай бұрын
Excellent vid! 👏🏻👏🏻
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@murdomcnab16036 ай бұрын
I echo the gentleman's sentiments. Well done and so very interesting!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@reinholdachleitner20696 ай бұрын
Awesome video,i thought you were Dylan Johnson at first.🙈💯✌🏻🚴♂️
@firdaushanapiah76916 ай бұрын
A great video! Thank you!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@TalesFromTheBlahSide6 ай бұрын
really enjoyed that thank you
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@christopher55853 ай бұрын
Steven Roche, last TDF Winner to use Toe Clips in 1987. Pedro Delgado continued LeMond's Carbon frame breakthrough with a Pinarello equipped Campagnolo C Record Delta brake version built by TVT.
@Czechbound6 ай бұрын
That was excellent. You handled the EPO very well. For me, I would emphasise the change in geometry in the last 15 years ( eg sloping top tube, more compact frame geometry vs high seat, lower attachment points for rear stays etc. ). I remember when carbon wheels came in in the mid 1980's, first as TT wheels ( MAVIC ! ) ... Looks like one bike for all stages, and 11/12 gear cassettes with one chain ring is the way forward now. I really hope there are no hidden motor cheaters in the pack.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good points, thanks for chiming in!
@Nemo596466 ай бұрын
Loved it!
@clio2rsminicup6 ай бұрын
Hi. “It’s the men on the bikes who win, not the bikes.” This statement was not always true in the very long history of the Tour. The perfect example in modern times of the Tour is that of the Tour 1989. The last stage of the Tour 1989 is a time trial, this is rare and this is therefore also the case for the Tour 2024. Before this last stage, two great champions are at the head of the Tour, the US Greg LeMond (1x Tour winner in this time) is second, the French Laurent Fignon (2x Tour winner in this time) is first with 50 seconds ahead of LeMond. During this last stage Fignon uses an almost "classic" bike, two wheels almost full and a little lighter than the bikes in normal stages. But LeMond uses a revolutionary bike for the time! Very light materials (carbon for example), a single solid rear wheel and above all a lightweight streamlined helmet and especially a very long handlebar in the shape of a cow's horn which allows it to run practically lying down with therefore much better aerodynamics than that of Fignon. LeMond won the time trial with 58 seconds ahead of Fignon, second in the stage, and therefore won the Tour with only 8 seconds ahead of Fignon, the smallest gap in the long history of the Tour de France! A great memory for US fans, a nightmare for French fans. That year, these 2 champions were of equal strength. LeMond was perhaps slightly stronger than Fignon in the time trials on flat roads, but throughout the Tour Fignon was superior to LeMond until this last stage (even if, few know it, at the end of the Tour Fignon suffered from severe irritation in his crotch due to excessive friction for 2 weeks, which nevertheless handicapped him a little during this final time trial). And it was LeMond's revolutionary bike for its time that allowed him to win the Tour 1989. To limit the importance of bikes, the following year the Tour organization banned all innovations on bicycles that had not been controlled and authorized by it and by the world cycling authorities. QED Video on this last terrible stage of the Tour 1989 here -> kzbin.info/www/bejne/aHSkh3inl7atgJI
@luism.26406 ай бұрын
Indurain didn't use Pinarello when he won his first Tour in 1991; for this year he used Spanish brand Razesa, and TVT for mountains. He's the only cyclist winning Tour with three materials (Steel, carbon and aluminum)
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Thanks for that catch, and a cool stat at that!!
@ToddBrittain19636 ай бұрын
Four materials: steel, carbon, aluminium and EPO 😁
@roadcyclist16 ай бұрын
@@ToddBrittain1963EPO isn't a material used in bike construction
@ToddBrittain19636 ай бұрын
@@roadcyclist1 you don't say LOL
@l.d.t.63276 ай бұрын
I don’t know for sure, but with some riders using titanium in the 90s / 2000s (think Armstrong’s litespeed), could t there be any riders having used carbon / titanium and a 3rd frame material winning the tour?
@sylvainswift32346 ай бұрын
TVT was a great brand. Back in the end of the 80's and beginning of the 90's all manufacturers used them for their top frames. Lemond, Pinarello and so on.
@muj36 ай бұрын
Great video
@eric1060716 ай бұрын
Great Video Dude!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it 🤙🤙
@burhanaltncan45276 ай бұрын
I was looking for this a month ago lol. probably an amazin video. I havent watched it yet
@burhanaltncan45276 ай бұрын
It was good yeah
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Haha glad we made it then, hope you enjoy!
@MacMasore6 ай бұрын
13:45 isn’t Cervelo a Canadian brand? Or at least back then?
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you!
@richardburkholder220Ай бұрын
Cervélo is cited as a European company, but began -- and spent its first 16 years as -- a Canadian one. Gerard Vroomen and Phil White founded it, with its initial design coming from Vroomen's work at McGill University in Montréal. I bought my time-trial bike in 1998, when its frame's curving slope over the rear wheel was revolutionary. They weren't able to obtain a patent on it, and it's been copied ever since.
@matthewhicks60896 ай бұрын
I loved the caveat about knowing that the athletes, not the bikes win the tour, but let's be honest... throughout long periods of the history you covered it was the doping (mech, pharm, etc.) that pushed select riders and bikes ahead of their peers.
@hell_p30224 ай бұрын
at 01:26 a bike with foot brakes is shown, which is evidenced by the lever that goes from the hub to the frame.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
Funny I never made the Raleigh/1980 Tour connection. The movie "Breaking Away" cemented my love of cycling by prompting me to get a road bike in 1979. By 1980 I was a road riding fanatic. I took my Raleigh Super Course everywhere! Funny coincidence that Raleigh won its only Tour that year. If it weren't for that frame failing at the rear brake bridge and the WRONG size warranty order, I'd most certainly still have that bike today. Oh well.
@rogerking72586 ай бұрын
This is a great and informative video, but I'm slightly confused by your description of "steel" bikes and "alloy" bikes. Steel _is_ an alloy, so what exactly do you mean?
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
True! In cycling, most manufactures refer to their aluminum frames as "alloy," not really sure when or why this started, but we followed suite in this video. We probably should have used more accurate language though!
@oi32df6 ай бұрын
10:15 Before the STI there was simply indexing on the down tube begining around '84 which was in itself a big improvement on the friction systems of until then. Your forgot some system too , like bar end gripShift ...yes those big yellow barrel of the post disco era .
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
True! There were definitely some innovations we skipped over to keep the video from running an hour long haha!
@Swampster705 ай бұрын
The black TVT bike shown then talking about Greg's 1986 win was actually a 1987 spec LaVie Claire bike. When Gret started the 87 season on this bike, it would be the only time he raced on Shimano. The 7 speed Dura Ace with SIS was something he actively fought for the team to get. He would crash on this bike in Tirrano Adriatico at the start of the year and whilst home recovering he was mistaken for a turkey and shot. The light grey/silver bikes LeMond and Hinault road in 86 were a similar frame with Campagnolo C-Record cobalto equipped. The name coming from those super cool "jewels" on the center nut of the sidepull caliper. The Look bikes were really just rebadged TVT bikes, not Look built with TVT tubes. In 1989 LeMond was using Mavic components not Shimano. He rode a Bottechia frame for most of the Tour with the TVT saved for the high mountains. In 1990 Greg was back on Campagnolo and when he lost the Tour in 91 he was on a Calfee.
@99spokes5 ай бұрын
Lots of knowledge there, thank you for sharing!
@johndef50754 ай бұрын
That Indurain white bike is beautiful. Would like to take it for a spin.
@StreetComp6 ай бұрын
Nice work digging out all the old photos and video 🙂 I’m a mt biker but road bikes have gotten neat looking over the last years and always enjoyed TdF. But is there any part left that can really be upgraded or improved?
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
That’s a great question! Like we mentioned at the end of the video, a lot of companies are merging their aero and climbing bikes; a great example of that is the new Trek Madone, and with it the end of the Emonda
@StreetComp6 ай бұрын
@@99spokes okay thanks, Madone is neat looking, looks smaller than the road bikes I remember riding years ago
@LordAus1236 ай бұрын
Road will probably go 1x mainstream. Full wireless electronic shifting is starting to go mainstream. Narrower bars (
@einundsiebenziger54886 ай бұрын
@@LordAus123 Narrow bars and short cranks are just fads, and already proven to work only for tiny riders. 1x on road bikes is complete nonsense. It simply does not provide the same gear range as 2x, you either have to compromise towards climbing gears or sprinting gears.
@StreetComp6 ай бұрын
@@LordAus123 okay thank you for the info. I wonder how long before we can’t tell the difference between an electric assisted and regular bike by looks, will always be heavier I would assume. Can hide motor in crankset/hub area, not sure what it’s called, and then smaller and more powerful batteries in downtube, riders will have a new way to cheat! So I spose there’s always some way to move forward.
@TESTA-CC6 ай бұрын
Cheers for this from the UK 🖖👌👍🤙
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@TESTA-CC6 ай бұрын
@@99spokes I Got 99 Problems, But my Bike isn't one 😁👍 Thanks Guys
@pcat0076 ай бұрын
great video
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@jemma_199886 ай бұрын
It is striking to me how little over a century bikes have changed. You still have drop bars diamond frame and a funny appendage to change gears
@RazzFazz-Race6 ай бұрын
this is because the UCI ruled in 1934 that a racing bike must have a diamond frame -> ban of recumbent bikes.
@dudeonbike8006 ай бұрын
Two efficient designs have survived the test of time: 1) The triangle truss 2) The tension wheel Hard to improve upon these two, despite their 120 plus year tenure. Try as it might, the industry hasn't.
@treygray28176 ай бұрын
I think Indurains road race bikes were steel up to '94. He made the switch to alloy in '95.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Correct, I believe the Keral Lite didn’t come out until ‘95
@HeidiLandRover6 ай бұрын
5:58 a thing of absolute beauty!
@Rekmeyata5 ай бұрын
The next revolution in bikes for the TDF will be the 1x drivetrain, going with just one gear in the front will reduce weight, which means they can put that weight someplace where it's needed, and it could improve aerodynamics a tad. After the 1x is introduced, shortly after, an automatic rear derailleur will emerge, promising to be faster than electric derailleurs, and responding automatically to the rider's chosen cadence range.
@99spokes5 ай бұрын
True, it was crazy seeing some of the SRAM riders on 1x setups this year, even on some climbing stages!
@lesbois536 ай бұрын
Vingo will ace this tour in the mountains! Made for him!
@michaelhanley75646 ай бұрын
lesbois53 said hopefully
@lesbois536 ай бұрын
@@michaelhanley7564 Ok, Michael, I maybe got it wrong! It’s just that I feel sorry for Vingo somehow. That crash has reduced his ability a lot, but Poggie is the best I have ever seen. I am 80, and living in France as I do is the only way to really experience the majesty and magic of the Tour. TV is not even close. I have seen every tour for real ever since Indurain won it. Including many very exciting Armstrong tours. Say what you like about him, he created massive excitement in his battles with the equally doped German Ullrich. I have watched Fab Cav win many stages. I have climbed a lot of the routes of the Tour, as living down here in the Massif Centrale, I am amongst some great climbs! I can still do a few on my Look 756 roadbike. Barring any accidents or bloody covid ffs ( who knew?) Poggie will ace the tour this year. However, Vingo, like Arnie, will be back! Watch this space!
@kennethanderson69004 ай бұрын
Love the old pix. FYI, elliptical ("oval") chain wheels had been used and found wanting back in the '70s, if not earlier. Bad things forgotten always creep back. Elliptical chain rings are cycling metaphor for the history of the human race.
@Fugitive_85 ай бұрын
Believe it or not Peugeot actually made bikes back in the 70s and they were honestly amazing
@mauriceism3 ай бұрын
I think all your pronunciations were great and you have a solid knowledge of the Tour. The only thing I found lacking was more pictures of the bikes especially during the Hinault, Fignon, Lemond era of the 1980s which for me was the real golden era of cycling. It’s been said that the Gitane ridden on hilly stages by these riders, was far heavier than Sean Kelly’s TT bike that wasn’t made to be light. Renault had access to the F1 wind tunnel where they made lots of innovations with bladed cow horn handlebars etc.. Why is it only in the last few years we see aero road suits when they had been using them in TT since the early 80’s? In my opinion the UCI shouldn’t allow the Peleton to look like avatars with all aero on road stages. I’m all for looking like an astronaut in the TT. Another interesting point is in professional racing we have seen a rise in death since compulsory helmets. Are the riders taking more risks thinking they are protected from such tragedy?
@99spokes3 ай бұрын
Right on, thank you for sharing! Those are really cool details!
@johnpaulamalong58486 ай бұрын
you missed Specialized/Nibali in 2014 - super cool video though!
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you!
@joecan6 ай бұрын
Cervelo was founded in Canada and still a Canadian company in 2008 during their 1st tour win. IIRC, they were bought by a dutch company in 2012 and since then are now HQ'd in California.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you!
@robertgravel51606 ай бұрын
Great video 👍 Next innovation? With electronic shifting now so common , how about auto shifting gears based on a preset cadence threshold, especially for regular cycling nerds like myself 🤷🏻♂️
@Videophilmer5 ай бұрын
Small tip for the camera work: either focus manually (by dedicated camera operator or setting focus on the lens to a fixed distance whilst not opening the aperture too much), or set the autofocus ("AF") in such a mode that it doesnt lock on wrong parts of the screen and prioritizes faces/the left area of the frame. It should lock on your/the narrator's face, not on the sticker on the laptop in front, which it does after 10:53. No amount of video postproduction can fix technically out of focus shots 🚴♂
@larssweede21234 ай бұрын
Luv this channel. But the "darkest era" were some of the best cycling years for fans. And the tour format was way better. Loved watching TDF from 98-2010. American enthusiasm was higher too You should definitely have another episode of "dark era" bikes. Trek, Cannondale....?
@99spokes4 ай бұрын
Glad you like the channel! Our reason was for skipping over was because for other tours when the winner was caught doping the race organizers listed the runner up as the champion. But since, like you said, doping was so wide spread in this era and Lance's titles were stripped years down the rode, the ASO officially states no winner for those years. No winner = no winning bikes
@venusfooltrap73716 ай бұрын
Why the pic of the consumer-level Peugeot Tourmalet to illustrate the steel bike era? No similar pics of actual Tour-winning bikes available?
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
It was definitely tricky tracking down high-res photos! But you’re right, I probably should have used something else there
@jeff57216 ай бұрын
Really good, informative video. One correction: Greg LeMond rode Campy C-Record in 1990, not Shimano. (His 1990 Campy-equipped Tour-winning bike is on display at the US Bicycling Hall of Fame in Davis, CA.) In fact, I don't think LeMond ever rode Shimano in his pro career.
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Good catch, thank you! And glad you enjoyed it!
@andyc.43876 ай бұрын
He did not. He rode Campagnolo except for 1989 when Mavic was a sponsor of his ADR team. A Shimano bike had never won the tour until Lance Armstrong in 1999.
@filmic16 ай бұрын
What a great historical survey. Q? Where did GT road bikes fit in? I saw a photo of a GTzr in a 2001? or 2002?? TDF. Not sure which. It was the only photo I saw of one. Thanks...
@99spokes6 ай бұрын
Cool! I’m actually not sure on that, I’ll have to look into it!
@filmic16 ай бұрын
@@99spokes Thanks.
@richardteale32173 ай бұрын
I may be wrong ,but I thought the newspaper that started the tour originally was L’ Equipe . I believe it was printed on yellow paper ,and that’s where the yellow jersey comes from .