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bikerumor monday mystery pic from first flight bicycles
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bikerumor monday mystery pic from first flight bicycles

Photo from the collection of Jeff Archer of First Flight Bicycles. If you think you know what this is, post your answer in the ‘comments’ section– the correct answer will be posted there on Tuesday!

To send in your own Mystery Pic to be considered for the Monday feature, click here and attach your photo with all pertinent information.

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Neil
Neil
12 years ago

Looks like a hydraulically adjustable rear derailleur that you can retract while going downhill.

Michael-Vittoria Shoes
12 years ago

Its THE Whhite Industries rear dérailleur they had at interbike years ago. It used a grip shift style ALLOY shifter and it had two cables running to it. One pulled it up one down. Worked nicely. Very smooth when I saw it at their booth. Not sure how long or how many sold. But it was made in the states and very cool.

Michael
12 years ago

It´s a rear derailleur from White Industries – 1997

bike1225
bike1225
12 years ago

the Whitest of Industries…push/pull rod style…hot to look at, not sure it would have been hot to ride but a neat piece

professorVelo
professorVelo
12 years ago

yep. white industries… probably 95-98 era – which was the best for mountain bike innovation

mark trousdale
mark trousdale
12 years ago

always wanted one of these as well as the paul der. set.

Ernesto
12 years ago

That is a White Industries!

RobO
RobO
12 years ago

I know where one of those exists out in the real world. One of the guys at Fresh Bikes has it in his colection. The other half of the system is really cool as well. The shifter is full CNC’d and the runs cable and housing for each direction of movement. It was an ausome idea but I’m pretty sure production costs were way to high espesially when you consider how little there compeditors, Gripshift and Sachs (plastic shifters), crap and functional (in that order), were at the time that they were working on this idea. I got a nice yellow grunge guard at the philly interbike show the same day I saw this. Super cool day. I’ve been hooked ever since.

Ben
Ben
12 years ago

Not sure what it’s called but when I woke up from my colonoscopy my doctor had it in his right hand.

pantsandjacket
pantsandjacket
12 years ago

LMDS.

Linear Motion Derailleur System.

Geek out:
http://www.disraeligears.co.uk/Site/White_Industries_LMDS_derailleur.html

Gillis
Gillis
12 years ago

Late 90’s White Industries rear derailleur. Used a a cool looking twist shifter that operated similar to a Rohloff, using two cables. The two guide rods (?) are stainless steel. If I recall it was pretty expensive, and it was pain to set up because of all the cables (the front derailleur used two cables as well).

Chris
Chris
12 years ago

As others have pointed out, it’s the White Industries read derailleur. The design wasn’t exactly new and was basically an update of the old Cyclo derailleur. However, unlike the Cyclo, the White design was neither simple nor reliable. It required a fairly specialized cable and cables tended to wear faster than regular derailleur cables. It was also an unholy nightmare to install. Add to that the high cost (more than XTR) and it’s no surprise these vanished almost as fast as they arrived. It was a really cool looking derailleur.

andy
andy
12 years ago

I raced on one of these white industries systems probably around 97 or 98…..beautifully made and supremely innovative!

Charlie B.
Charlie B.
12 years ago

White Industries LMDS rear derailleur – dual cable twist shifter controlled. Not functionally great.

Gary Strabala
Gary Strabala
12 years ago

I remember when these came out and I read, as I recall, an extremely negative review by Lenard Zinn in Velonews. Soon after i was down at the Cactus Cup, saw Doug White and his new derailleur and in my most idiotic,lack of tact way blurted out to Doug how Velonews didn’t like his new product. Appropriately, he growled something back at me & I headed off with my tail between my legs!! I’ll never forget it!! I thought the product was neat, thought I never bought one. I spent all my money on Precision Billet CNC machined derailleurs and shifters that broke with regularity. I sent them back for repairs so often i became friendly with them!!

jonny
jonny
12 years ago

I thought a single speed converter at first.

Chris
Chris
12 years ago

@ Andy:
“supremely innovative!”

Hardly. The whole concept was done 60+ years ago. Only difference is the ones from 60+ years ago were more popular, more reliable and easier to set up. 😉

Loki
Loki
12 years ago

White Industries LMDS which had 3 different head size allen bolts yet used an ‘easy to round’ hex head fasterner to attach to the hanger. Beautiful, innovative, engineering auto eroticism.

MissedThePoint
MissedThePoint
12 years ago

Judging by the pic, I thought it was a chain tensioner that let you run a cassette… oh wait, that’s exactly what a rear derailleur is!

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