I am sorry to see such an interesting brand shut down and I always liked Leo's general style and the ideas and design of the bikes.
That said, I've known of exactly 2 Poles personally in my market, and both failed spectacularly, one within an hour. Then I read exactly 2 Pole reviews, in total, both on PB. One of those also broke and the other one just wasn't a very good bike with an uber rigid chassis & used it's travel entirely too easily even though it was a 190mm (I think).
Although Pole was not required to pre-order frames (advantage) from Tiawan and I would have thought this would have saved them in these lean times, I suspect his manufacturing method was not cheap at all. Also, the method didn't create the strongest bike per gram so Pole's have to carry more weight to try and compensate. I think ultimately trying to translate Leo's ideas into a Taiwanese factory and have light/ strong frames delivered for $600/ each would seem to make more sense to me.
Really, Chris Porter's Geometron's have similar ethos, but seem to do everything a fair bit better. The chassis' have the geo, they are very adjustable, they simply don't break, they aren't overly rigid, they have major support from an old brand & they have an appropriate leverage ratio in the rear. I'd really like to see Porter create some e-bike versions of his creations as I think they would be really good.
RIP Pole.
That said, I've known of exactly 2 Poles personally in my market, and both failed spectacularly, one within an hour. Then I read exactly 2 Pole reviews, in total, both on PB. One of those also broke and the other one just wasn't a very good bike with an uber rigid chassis & used it's travel entirely too easily even though it was a 190mm (I think).
Although Pole was not required to pre-order frames (advantage) from Tiawan and I would have thought this would have saved them in these lean times, I suspect his manufacturing method was not cheap at all. Also, the method didn't create the strongest bike per gram so Pole's have to carry more weight to try and compensate. I think ultimately trying to translate Leo's ideas into a Taiwanese factory and have light/ strong frames delivered for $600/ each would seem to make more sense to me.
Really, Chris Porter's Geometron's have similar ethos, but seem to do everything a fair bit better. The chassis' have the geo, they are very adjustable, they simply don't break, they aren't overly rigid, they have major support from an old brand & they have an appropriate leverage ratio in the rear. I'd really like to see Porter create some e-bike versions of his creations as I think they would be really good.
RIP Pole.