I'll go with the "honest mistake" idea here; Jubilees were labeled Sachs-Huret their last few years and the cutout, uncoated shift levers were sold with all derailleurs so labeled. A number of bikes used them as OEM, Trek, Peugeot, and a few others. I don't think the original plastic-over-chrome Jubilee levers were produced after 1980. David Feldman
> >The odd thing is Grant seems to
> >be trying to make Jubilee some kind of icon, yet doesn't seem to know
what the
> >real Jubilee shift levers were. Rather strange. Maybe he saw a
> >bike with this
> >combination and assumed the leveres were Jubilee as well.
>
> Let's all remember right after being a bike fiend Grant is a
> Marketing Person and by plying his trade he makes a living. From
> time to time he tries to give "iconhood" to some item or other, some
> with success, some without. A lot of it being straight marketing
> hype with very little substance. My guess is the person that sold
> him the warehouse of the things told him they were Jubilee and he
> took them at their word wether he knew or not. People that unload
> huge NOS stockpiles many times don't have all the details and a lot
> of stuff is actually not really as advertised. In the past I've
> dealt with a few of these folks, but you usually wouldn't deal with
> them unless you were mail order or a distributor, like Grant. Has
> anyone called Grant and asked what the story is? I don't want to
> look like a GP appologist but honest mistakes happen quite often in
> this business when you're dealing with NOS parts.
> enjoy,
> Brandon"monkeyman"Ives
>
> --
> Huge Spring Cleaning Bike Parts Sale
> http://www.uweb.ucsb.edu/
>
> !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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> but if everybody did something
> everything would get done.
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