Fat City Cycles
Industry | Bicycles |
---|---|
Fate | Bought by a Holding Company and Closed |
Successor | Independent Fabrication |
Founded | 1982 |
Defunct | 1999 |
Headquarters | Somerville, Massachusetts |
Key people | Chris Chance |
Products | Mountain, Cyclocross and Road Bicycles |
Fat City Cycles was an American bicycle manufacturing company. Fat City was started by Chris Chance in 1982.[1] Fat City Cycles was one of the early builders of mountain bikes on the East Coast of the United States.[2] When Fat City moved from Somerville, Massachusetts to South Glens Falls, New York, many of the employees left behind went on to start Independent Fabrication.[3]
History of Fat City Cycles
Chris Chance began building frames in 1977. The company was financed amongst others by his wife Wendyll's family. Chance built his first mountain bike frame in 1982, The Fat Chance.[1]
Fat City Cycles closed its doors in Somerville in October 1994, when it was sold to a holding company which had acquired another bike company (Serotta) in South Glens Falls, New York. The holding company moved the Fat City equipment to South Glens Falls.[3] Few employees remained with the company after the move.
Fans and enthusiasts of the now-defunct Fat City Cycles and Fat Chance bicycles from around the world now share their bikes, stories and love of the brand at the web site Fat Cogs,[4] or the Fat Chance Owners Group — the club of Fat fans everywhere.
The most famous product that came from Fat City Cycles was without doubt the cult Yo Eddy. The Yo as it is often referred to is one of the most iconic and collectable mountain bikes of the early 90's. The famous Team Violet 1991 and 1992 versions with matching rigid "Yo Eddy" forks are often the most desirable and are often built with Ringle, Grafton, Bullseye, Syncros and RockShox parts. Owning a Yo is the pinnacle for most vintage mountain bike collectors and the value of these bikes in recent years has seen a significant rise.
Models
Below is a list of some of the bicycles that Fat City Cycles offered.
Model | Introduced | Discontinued | Material | Type of bike | Sizes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fat Chance[5] | Cro-mo steel | Mountain bike | |||
Fat Chance with 24" Rear Wheel[6] | Mountain bike | ||||
Team Comp [7] | Mountain bike | ||||
Monster Fat[8] | 1991 | 1993 | Cro-mo steel | Mountain bike | |
Slim Chance[9] | Cro-mo steel | Road bike | |||
Shock A Billy Full[10] | 1994 | Cro-mo steel | Full suspension mountain bike |
||
Yo Eddy | 1991 | 1999 | Cro-mo steel | Mountain bike | |
Titanium | 1993 | 1999 | Titanium | Mountain bike | |
Yo Betty | Cro-mo steel | Mountain bike | |||
Buck Shaver | 1994 | Cro-mo steel | Mountain bike | ||
Wicked Fat Chance | 1987 | Cro-mo steel | Mountain bike | ||
Fat F*ck'n Chance | |||||
Bro Eddy | |||||
Flaming Sea Cycles | 1980 | ||||
Random Tandem | Tandem Mountain Bike | ||||
References
- 1 2 Fat Chance Museum
- ↑ The Mountain Bike Hall of Fame - Hall of Fame Inductees
- 1 2 Independent Fabrication
- ↑ http://www.FatCogs.com
- ↑ 1983 Fat Chance
- ↑ 1987 Fat Chance w/ 24" rear wheel
- ↑
- ↑ 1991 Monster Fat
- ↑ 1992 Slim Chance
- ↑ 1994 Fat Chance Shock A Billy