Any 'RIBBLE' owners out there??????
Any 'RIBBLE' owners out there??????
Author
Discussion

3024E

Original Poster:

483 posts

208 months

Sunday 21st December 2008
quotequote all
I have just got back into cycling after many years and bought a fabulous alloy ribble road bike, never had one before, had carltons/claud butler/dawes/ years ago

trackcar

6,453 posts

249 months

Sunday 21st December 2008
quotequote all
I have a Ribble. And that's all I have to say about that.

3024E

Original Poster:

483 posts

208 months

Sunday 21st December 2008
quotequote all
So is that good or bad????????????

b2hbm

1,301 posts

245 months

Monday 22nd December 2008
quotequote all
it probably means "it's ok but nothing special".

I bought one a few years back when I also returned to cycling after years of idleness. I loved it, rode it for a few years until it broke at the chainstays and then moved on to other makers.

My personal view is that Ribble bikes are good value because my self-builds certainly cost more than their packages. They're neither the best nor the worst on the market, but pretty good at their price point. And if I'm honest, I'm not convinced that paying £2k or whatever for a bike really gives you £2k's worth of advantage or enjoyment.

trackcar

6,453 posts

249 months

Monday 22nd December 2008
quotequote all
I still have my ribble some 15 years after buying it, just don't ask me if i would buy another.

Regional

565 posts

244 months

Monday 22nd December 2008
quotequote all
I'm happy with mine.
I'm new to road cycling but compared to my old giant OCR i prefer the Ribble for the ride it gives.
Hourses for courses.

Bluerallye

3 posts

231 months

Tuesday 30th December 2008
quotequote all
Living not far from Ribble and being perfectly aware of the sh#t service and quality of years gone by i have to come to their defence and say that they are a world away from where they once were. I go into the shop for tyres, lubes and stuff and cannot be failed to be amazed at what they can do for the prices, especially on some of their high end stuff. Dedaccia carbon frame with Ultegra groupsets for just over 1100 notes is something else, and they ride like they cost 3-4 times the amount.

Chatting to one of the guys in the shop and it seems that they source the frames from the east from the same build line that a certain Italian manufacterer does too. The frames are also shipped to Belgium alongside the 'Italian' counterparts for painting before being sent to Ribble to be stickered up. The Italian ones are stickered up out there and distributed onwards where you then get smacked with the premium for the 'P' name and handling charges. Might sound like bullsh#t but having compared the build quality, geometry, welds and paint finish of the same scandium framed Ribbles and the Italian 'P's i'm inclined to believe them...

Edited by Bluerallye on Tuesday 30th December 09:50

trackcar

6,453 posts

249 months

Tuesday 30th December 2008
quotequote all
Good to know their customer service is better than it used to be, that's a positive note thumbup

b2hbm

1,301 posts

245 months

Tuesday 30th December 2008
quotequote all
yeah, I'd say they've come on a lot as well, their mail order has been very good over the past year. GOod prices, quick delivery but they're up against Parkers, CRC & Wiggle so maybe that's why.

I'd also believe the story about frames. I bought a Pedalforce this year and although they're a US company they made no secret of the fact their frames are made in Asia. I've forgotten the factory they used but do remember looking on t'interweb and seeing some very familiar designs on their website, and they also claimed to be manufacturing & badging for both European & US based companies.

red355

231 posts

236 months

Friday 2nd January 2009
quotequote all
trackcar said:
Good to know their customer service is better than it used to be, that's a positive note thumbup
I know at least 5 from my cycling club who say they will never order from Dribble again......that now includes me.
Just once too often they have let me down or sent the wrong thing. (maybe a bit like tescos online service, send teh nearest thing)
If its in stock then they are good as the others, but if not then anything goes.

Personally I tend to use wiggle or my LBS or even Halfords who where really really helpful to a friend recently..... no doubt others have had good service from the shop mentioned in the thread

Just my 5 dongs worth
(a dong not worth much it seems after watching Sundays top gear special)

bumrar

178 posts

222 months

Tuesday 6th January 2009
quotequote all
I have a ribble. Its only a cheapish one and was my first and only racer. Had it about 5 years now, I chose a ribble as it was competitively priced and I am local to them. Ive always found the guys in the shop helpful, and the order online, collect at the warehouse service works really well. Quite a few of my cycling buddies ride ribbles and no one has had any problems with the bikes or customer services.

welshnobby

1,201 posts

266 months

Thursday 12th March 2009
quotequote all
I am enjoying my Ribble Nero Corsa, it served me well on the 180km Dragon ride and 160km Cheddar Challenge last year. Full carbon with Ultegra, it rides like a much more expensive bike!

fergus

6,430 posts

298 months

Friday 13th March 2009
quotequote all
thegavster said:
I have a Ribble from about 17 years ago, it was my first 'proper' road bike, nicked my Dad's old Campag Record hubs, MA40 rims, then a combo of shimano bits and pieces elsewhere. Still got it as a hack bike as it's being replaced by a new Spesh tomorrow biggrin
MA40, now we're talking! Has anyone still got the original Mavic SSCs?!

welshnobby

1,201 posts

266 months

Friday 13th March 2009
quotequote all
I do have an old ALAN frame (r30 carbonio), it has carbon tubes with milled aluminium inserts. I wonder if it is worth anything these days. It has those very beautiful but extremely heavy and ineffective Campag Delta brakes on it. Not sure what the running gear is but it is Mavic.