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Interbike show -

Las Vegas, Nevada USA, September 25-29, 2006

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Interbike Part 1 – Day one is all about the demo bikes

By Steve Medcroft in Boulder City, Nevada

For the MTBers,
Photo ©: Steve Medcroft
(Click for larger image)

The Interbike trade show opened on Monday with the first of two-days of its popular Outodoor Demo where 130 bike and accessory manufacturers’ setup camp on 61,200 square feet of outdoor exhibit space in dusty Bootleg Canyon in Boulder City, Nevada.

Demo’s was the key word for the opening day of the U.S. market’s largest bicycle trade show. Retailers, industry insiders and media had numerous chances to test products like bikes, shows, clothing, helmets, pedals and supplements.

Looking over the bike choices alone, there had to be as many as 1,000 mountain, road and everything in-between bikes available for the steady stream of riders to take into the surrounding hills and neighborhoods.

The immensity of the effort these companies have taken to provide demo ride opportunities to the trade show’s attendees represent a huge but worthy effort. Jake Pantone, Sales Manager for the Biker’s Edge in Kaysville, Utah, said that he planned to “ride all the bike lines we carry in the shop and understand the products better then try some new stuff; look for new lines to fill our customer’s needs.”

Jake Pantone,
Photo ©: Steve Medcroft
(Click for larger image)

Pantone and eight of his colleagues from the Biker’s Edge, three-quarters of the shop’s entire staff, are in Boulder City and plan to take full advantage of the largesse of the bike industry. “I’m going to get in as many rides as possible,” Pantone says, “try and ride ten or twenty bikes.”

We caught him just coming in from a ride on Maverick’s six-inch all-mountain bike, the ML8. “It’s an awesome bike,” he said about a model his shop carries but he hadn’t had a chance to test until Monday. “It’s capable of pretty much anything. You can climb on it, you can downhill on it. It fits the heavy-duty cross country and lightweight freeride category.”

Pulling it off

Knolly's red Delirium-T
Photo ©: Steve Medcroft
(Click for larger image)

What was interesting about Outdoor Demo was the sheer number of companies with demo fleets. It seems like every major manufacturer bought into the concept; Felt, Shimano, SRAM, Giant, Trek, Colnago, Fisher, and on and on, had impressive fleets of bikes and dozens of staff to keep the line of riders moving on and off their test bikes.

Even the boutique builders managed to pull fleets together. “We brought ten bikes here,” says Noel Buckley, President of Knolly bikes, a new, niche manufacturer based in Vancouver, British Columbia. “A few of the riders are people that are familiar with us through word of mouth. Which has always been a major part of our sales. But being a new company (the company only produced it’s first North-short-style full-suspension freeride frames 20 months ago) we’re seeing a lot of people that may have heard of us but because we haven’t reached a lot of places, haven’t seen the bikes.”

By far the largest demo bike setup was put together by Cannondale. “We have somewhere between 200 and 250 bikes,” says demo program manager Andy Schiffler.

Master of logistics
Photo ©: Steve Medcroft
(Click for larger image)

Schiffler, who used to be the team mechanic for the East Coast Sobe/Headshock mountain-bike team, says he and the demo team have been working on the plans for their massive Outdoor Demo (70-feet x 40-feet) setup for three months. “We collected bikes from three of four different locations - from all of our demo fleet trucks, from our corporate office, from our factory - and had some special made for the show.”

The manufacturer’s putting in the effort to demo bikes at the show expect it will pay off in greater numbers of people getting practical experience on their products. “We did 675 test rides last year,” Cannondale’s Schiffler says. “And we did it in a smaller setup with fewer bikes. We’re hoping to break 1,000 this year.”

Interbike continues on Tuesday with a second day of Outdoor demo.

Photography

For a thumbnail gallery of these images, click here

Images by Steve Medcroft/Cyclingnews.com

  • Day one of Interbike was all about bike demo's. 130 vendors setup at the Outdoor Demo at Bootleg Canyon in Boulder City, Nevada. Many of them (like Santa Cruz pictured here) brought bikes for retailers, industry insiders and media to try.
  • BMC had their line of mountain and road bikes out for riders to try.
  • For the MTBers, a network of cross-country and downhill trails awaited. For the roadies, routes through the surrounding neighborhoods would have to do.
  • Jake Pantone, Sales Manager of the Biker's Edge in Kaysville, was among those retailers getting saddle time at Interbike's Outdoor demo
  • Cannondale brought the biggest setup; with over 200 bikes to test, Cannondale says it expectes to serve almost 1,000 test riders. And what are people riding? “The most popular bikes are the System Six and the Carbon Rush but our two-niner and the Synapse are also popular,” said demo manager Andy Schiffler.
  • Master of logistics at Cannondale, Andy Schiffler, normally runs their three-truck demo fleet.
  • On a smaller scale, Knolly bikes, headed by president Noel Buckley, brought ten of it's high-ened freeride bikes from it's home office in British Columbia. Knolly is Noel's nickname.
  • A closer look at the Knolly Delirium-T.
  • Knolly's red Delirium-T awaits its next ride

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