Litespeed
Type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Bicycles |
Founded | 1986 |
Headquarters | Ooltewah, Tennessee, United States |
Key people | Peter Hurley, CEO |
Products | Bicycles |
Parent | American Bicycle Group |
Website | www.litespeed.com |
Litespeed is a U.S. bicycle manufacturer founded by members of the Lynskey family in 1986 in Ooltewah, Tennessee.[1][2] The company has its roots in a family-owned custom machine shop known as Southeast Machine that specialized in exotic metals. Its interest in bicycles began while one of the members of the founding family took up cycling while recovering from a running injury; this led eventually to manufacturing its first bicycle in 1986.
Litespeed makes titanium and carbon fiber-framed road racing bicycles and mountain bikes. Litespeed is owned by the American Bicycle Group, parent company of bicycle manufacturer Quintana Roo as well as component fabricator Real Design (ABG also owned Merlin (bicycles) from 2000-2011).
In the 1999 Tour de France, Lance Armstrong rode a titanium Litespeed Blade painted and labeled as a Trek during time trials. Several professionals have ridden Litespeeds painted as other brands. European brands such as Eddy Merckx and Bianchi have contracted Litespeed to construct titanium frames in their own lines.
Litespeed sponsored the DFL-Cyclingnews-Litespeed and Calyon/Litespeed Pro Cycling road teams and the Maxxis mountain bike team. The ITU Triathlon World Cup champion Vanessa Fernandes (Portugal) also raced on a Litespeed.
Litespeed has been a contractor and consultant to NASA for projects that require titanium-intensive subassemblies including the Mars Curiosity Rover.[3]
In 2014, Litespeed announced that they would sponsor the Astellas Pro Cycling Team for three seasons.[4]
Road Models
T-Series: The T-Series includes award-winning T1 (formerly the Archon), the T3, T5, and the T7 which was introduced in 2013.
L-Series: The L-Series was introduced in 2012. Litespeed has four L-Series bikes: L1R, L1 (SRAM Red), Li2, and L3 (Ultegra). The L-Series is an all-around road racing bike, with an asymmetrical frame, and UCI-approved.
C-Series: The L-Series was introduced in 2008. Litespeed has four C-Series bikes: C1R, C1 (Dura-Ace), Ci2, and C3 (Ultegra). The C-Series is an aero road bike series..
Archon: The Archon racing bicycle (renamed 'T1') incorporates 6/4 titanium in its top tube for torsional stiffness and reduced weight. A number of tube junctions are welded in a contoured pattern called a wrap, claimed to increase the stiffness of the junction. The Archon is available in flat and sloping top tube. The Archon does not utilize an integrated headset but a traditional threadless headset with external bearing cups
Icon: A racing bicycle that incorporates many design elements of the Archon but a more supple ride at the expense of greater weight and reduced stiffness. The Icon utilizes softer 3al-2.5v titanium for its entire frame. The Ardennes features impact-damping tapered seat stays similar to those on the Siena and geometry similar to the compact layout of the Ghisallo. Less aggressive tube butting and shaping accounts for higher weight and lower price.
Sportive: A road bicycle that favors comfort and stability over weight and race response. It is designed as an entry-level model to offer a comfortable ride.
Ultimate: (discontinued) The flagship model from 1991 to 2006 featuring a tapered and ovalized down tube and a curved seat tube.[5]
References
- ↑ "Lynskey Helix OS". Bicycling. Mar 2013. Retrieved 2013-09-12. "The Lynskey family formed Litespeed in 1986"
- ↑ "Titanium's First Family". Bicycle Guide. Nov/Dec 1992. Retrieved 2013-09-12.
- ↑ Matt Cole (Oct 4, 2007). "Litespeed Titanium is going to Mars". BikeRadar. Retrieved 2012-07-17. "NASA has built the landing gear using titanium fabricated by Litespeed."
- ↑ "Litespeed Returns To The Pro Peloton". Chattanoogan.com. February 01, 2014. Retrieved 2014-02-01.
- ↑ "Model history – Litespeed Ultimate road frame". Titanium Rides. January 19, 2011. Retrieved 2012-07-17.
External links
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