MBR Mountain Bike Rider

FA K E BIKES

Cheap imitations won’t break the bank, but they could break your bones...

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We found a bargain – a brand new carbon frame, complete with VPP lower link-driven shock layout and California­n good looks for less than $1,000. If that sounds too good to be true though, it really is, because the bike we saw isn’t actually made by Santa Cruz. Instead, your $1,000 frame is fabricated by Winow Sports and made in Guangdong, China – it’s got 150mm travel, comes in eight colours, sells through alibaba.com, and is a near copy of the original.

We’re not suggesting Winow Sports has done anything illegal here, because the VPP link patent has expired and the words “Santa Cruz” do not appear on the listing or bike. But to any right-thinking rider, the bikes are identical to the eye. We reached out to Winow Sports, which told us that there are some “data changes” that also mean Santa Cruz is unable to ask it to stop production, no patents having been breached.

While hunting out the Winow Sports bikes (the company makes plenty more than just the Santa-cruz-alike) we also stumbled across a slew of other bikes from various sellers that bear striking resemblanc­es to other mainstream brands’ offerings. And a bike that looked suspicious­ly like a Specialize­d Stumpjumpe­r, complete with Sidearm frame design, which was swiftly withdrawn from sale after we pointed it out to Specialize­d.

So, with huge savings to be made for consumers with frames selling at less than a third of the price of the real thing, is it in your best interests to buy a nearreplic­a ride?

Absolutely not, Specialize­d says.

But then it would say that, wouldn’t it? “One quality that makes it tough to differenti­ate is that the paint is often pretty good,” says Andrew Love from Specialize­d. “But you don’t ride paint.”

Why shouldn’t we opt for something that looks just as good as the original, we asked, and save ourselves some money? According to Andrew, principall­y they’re problemati­c because the quality is questionab­le. He’s the man in charge of brand security and tasked with stopping the fakes. “They contain inferior carbon and incomplete layups – you can break the fake road Aerofly handlebars with your bare hands,” he says. There are serious safety concerns, with misaligned frames, weak carbon and a lack of precision in terms of wall thickness and quality control.

We put this idea to Winow Sports, but here the conversati­on dried up.

Bikes sold in the UK must adhere to the European General Product Safety Regulation­s (GPSR) standard, which has been carried over after Brexit.

That means manufactur­ers need to ensure a bike is safe, that buyers are told about any risks inherent in using it, and that there’s recourse should things go wrong. Does the Winow Sports brand sign up to GPSR? The short answer was no, with the erroneous suggestion this is something the distributo­r is solely responsibl­e for.

COUNTERFEI­TERS?

“These counterfei­ters are selling to foreigners who can never find them,” Andrew Love said of the fake Stumpjumpe­r. “They have zero motivation or concern for safety. I say this because we see the same safety concerns in bikes as counterfei­t helmets. They are absolutely deadly and offer no protection for riders at all. Their focus is the appearance of the product and hitting as low of a price point as possible, but provides zero functional­ity for what a helmet should have by cutting corners.”

There are other concerns too, with no recourse should things go wrong and no support in the event of the product breaking. “The sales outlets move all the time. Riders get no recourse when something goes wrong (frame cracks or wheel misalignme­nt, seatposts not staying fixed in place, etc).”

Specialize­d has plenty to lose from knock-off bikes, not least sales and a potential loss of reputation if riders get mixed up and assume the knock-offs are the real thing. But do we as riders lose out going down this road and buying direct from China? Would you buy one?

“Naaah, at least not until a bunch of others tested it first, but even then dubious quality control between individual frames would put me off. The injury risk is needless. Rather just take my steel hardtail out and know it’s bomb proof,” said Drwilliams, via Instagram.

A quick straw poll on social media showed a pretty even split between those who’d buy directly from China and riders who want the real deal.

There’s also a strong belief out there that these bikes are made in the same factories as the original products.

“Those frames have a good chance to be made in the same place, in the same moulds. Ya know - ‘after hours’. Carbon is such a commodity there, and they honestly make excellent components,” said powertrip via Instagram.

This is certainly not the case with our Chinese Stumpjumpe­r here, because the Morgan Hill brand makes all its highend frames in Taiwan rather than the mainland. Its argument against getting a fake bike is that they’re of inferior quality too, made in inferior moulds, and “are not comparable bikes,” in the words of Andrew Love.

To protect itself, and consumers, Specialize­d reckons it removes 40-50 listings a day across various sales and social media platforms. It’s more than just whack-a-mole though, according to Andrew, the brand goes after the factories in China that make the stuff and distributo­rs across Europe and the US that bring it in, following the money chain just as the police does against organised crime.

EDUCATING RIDERS

“We fight, full spectrum, in every way we can,” Andrew says. “Something that is equally as important is rider education. It’s important to bring these issues to light any way possible so that they make educated and informed purchase decisions, not just looking at the cheapest price on the internet.”

Buying a copycat bike is a dangerous game to play then, because you risk your money and your health on a bike without warranty or quality control. Buying some fake CK underwear online or a stunning new “Rolex” from a market stall on holiday is one thing, because you don’t risk injury if something goes wrong. A bike is another level though, we need to trust it not to break under normal circumstan­ces, and we don’t think you can put your faith in a knock off.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? This carbon copy would fool all but the most eagle-eyed Santa Cruz fan
This carbon copy would fool all but the most eagle-eyed Santa Cruz fan
 ?? ?? Opting for the real deal is the smart option
Opting for the real deal is the smart option
 ?? ??

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