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Miyata

Miyata started making bicycles in 1890 in Tokyo, Japan. By 1982 it started making mountain bikes for partner Univega and branded its own mountain bikes the next year, presumably after seeing how wildly successful Univega was at moving mountain bikes 1) The Miyata brand continues to exist today. 2)

Bijin on a Miyata, 1920
Bijin on a Miyata, 1920 oldtokyo


1983 Ridge Runner

The first Miyata not to have a number or “Miyata” in the model name. Almost fully Suntour: hubs, pedals, derailleurs, shifters, freewheel, and chain. 31 pounds. Mountain blue only. 3) The Miyata Ridge Runner exists today as an e-mt-bike only.

Miyata also made a semi-offroad Terra-Runner in 1983, costing $395, weighing 32 pounds, with SunTour AG Tech front and rear, with 26×1.75 tires. Nov 1983 Bicycling mag.

1983 Ridge Runner
1983 Ridge Runner ragandbone


1984 Ridge Runner

Specs unchanged, with slightly better gearing yet somehow adding an extra three pounds. The only way to spot a 1984 from a 1983 would be extra decorative seat tube stickers on the 1984, lower cased “miyata” decal, and the words “Ridge Runner” on the top tube, all of which the 1983 model lacked. Miyata also added two near mountain bikes with tall gearing and cruising tires: Terra Runner and Street Runner. 34 pounds. Mountain blue only. 4)

1984 Ridge Runner
1984 Ridge Runner flickr


1985 Terra Runner OR

The 1984 Terra Runner street cruiser gets transformed into a budget “Off Road” bike with the addition of fat tires. The OR was only available in 1985. Meanwhile, the Ridge Runner loses two pounds and maintains a slightly higher spec. 32 pounds. Black only. In 1985, the top tube title lettering change to all caps the seat tube stripes became diagonal. Standard Ridge Runners only came in Rocky Blue at this point. 5)

1985 Terra Runner OR
1985 Terra Runner OR ratrodbikes


Production Notes

[1]. ?

1)
Univega sold more mountain bikes than any other brand from 1982 → 1985 (Univega) and hence Miyata was, for a while, the largest mountain bike manufacturer.
2)
The Japanese Mazda Miata supposedly gets its name from old German. Mazda doesn't use the “Miata” name in markets where “Miyata” bicycles continue to be sold to avoid copyright issues.
miyata/start.1641067347.txt.gz · Last modified: 2022/01/01 12:02 by mtbtimeline