RE: [CR]Advice needed - 531 decals on 1974 Raleigh International

(Example: Production Builders:Peugeot:PX-10LE)

From: "Steve Birmingham" <sbirmingham@mindspring.com>
To: <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
Subject: RE: [CR]Advice needed - 531 decals on 1974 Raleigh International
Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 17:50:37 -0400
In-Reply-To: <MONKEYFOODuDS3Tqr3X00001ba9@monkeyfood.nt.phred.org>


Another possiblity, although a real long shot is that Raleigh automated the affixing of the decals, and the square ones worked better, or more could fit on a roll of decals. They did make a lot of bikes at the time, and putting the decals on would have involved lots of labor.

Steve Birmingham Lowell,Ma USA

Date: Wed, 25 May 2005 09:39:20 -0700 (PDT) From: Fred Rafael Rednor <fred_rednor@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: [CR]Advice needed - 531 decals on 1974 Raleigh International Message: 4

> This leads to the strange but almost inescapable > conclusion that Reynolds made that decal in two > shapes, square for Raleigh, and rectangular for > everyone else. We know that Schwinn, Jack Taylor > and perhaps others had custom versions of Reynolds > decals and of course there were versions in French... > As I was reading Jerry's comment - the one in which he said "Reynolds made that decal" - I realized that, most likely, none of the Reynolds decals were made by Reynolds. reynolds made metal products and no doubt found a contractor in the transfer/decal/sticker business to produce their emblems.

Perhaps they used different contractors at different times, which might account for _some_ of the variations in style and size. At least there are no spelling errors (that I can detect) on the Reynolds decals - even the French ones. The same can't be said for the firm that made the "Monthlery" insignias for Mavic. Consider this: either no one at Mavic noticed the mistake or, due to the pressures of delivery schedules and so forth, they decided to use the "imperfect" emblems. I would not be surprised if this situation sometimes applied to Reynolds, Raleigh, et al...
      Cheers,
      Fred Rednor - Arlington, Virginia (USA)