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Guys who’ve grown up living, breathing and absorbing BMX ever since they were young enough to hit a wooden kicker.
1990S FREE AGENT BMX FRAMES FULL
The vintage bike collector scene is full of such people. I think every true rider will tell you that it never leaves you, even long after you’ve put the bike down. What happens after we stop riding? Do we forget about riding completely, or is it still there in our blood. The packages that went to a friend’s place, in a bid to dodge these sensitive negotiations. The justification and skill involved in getting the wife to agree to the almost inexplicable purchases. Long hours of apparently staring blankly at a computer screen. It is never easy to justify the necessary activities of the vintage BMX Collector. The weird and wonderful shaped parcels started flowing through the international mail system, attempting to dodge “destination” taxes and VAT charges, as we defied logic and trusted people we had never met with large sums of cash. An honour system developed, and we became a community.
1990S FREE AGENT BMX FRAMES SERIAL
A group of forty something year old guys, deciphering serial numbers, matching paint codes and pestering the overworked graphic designer in the group to make decals. A sense of camaraderie developed that still astounds me when I look back. It seemed like every old brand – Race and Freestyle alike – had a small group of dedicated experts who were obsessively researching and sharing their findings. But the common theme in those days was a collective thirst for knowledge. Ebay became our least preferred market place, but most understood that to “score”, or find the bargains that had no perceived value to the uneducated seller, it was a necessary resource and we capitalised. In those days there were no Retro re-releases, ride-outs, or Facebook groups, we basically dropped anchor on a couple of internet forums and shared information that we derived from the era correct bikes we found, or the dog-eared magazines that our parents still had in the loft. It mainly consisted of ex neighbourhood and shop sponsored riders from different parts of the world who had reconnected to BMX in a similar way to myself. Back then, the collecting scene was quite different to what we see today.