Warning

 

Close
Confirm Action

Are you sure you wish to do this?

Cancel Confirm
AR15.COM
7/1/2008 5:15:31 PM EDT
WOW


7/1/2008 5:18:16 PM EDT
[#1]
I had a blue one in 73. The guy is an idiot for not taking the 100K.
7/1/2008 5:20:29 PM EDT
[#2]
I have a 70s model Sting-Ray at my parents house.  I doubt it's worth anywhere near $100,000.
7/1/2008 5:23:14 PM EDT
[#3]

Quoted:
The guy is an idiot for not taking the 100K.



ditto
7/1/2008 5:23:53 PM EDT
[#4]
Ill take the 100k......
7/1/2008 5:27:09 PM EDT
[#5]
That was my very first bicycle and probably was in 1963.  
7/1/2008 5:27:37 PM EDT
[#6]
I had a early '60s model in 1970... Cheater slick, sissy bar and everything. Someone stole it.

7/1/2008 5:29:54 PM EDT
[#7]
I can think of a WAY better Sting-Ray to spend $100,000 on.....
7/1/2008 5:34:03 PM EDT
[#8]
The two thousand dollar offers are insane. The Baby Boomers are lossing their minds trying to relive their childhood,  with all the cool stuff they didn't get for christmas.


No wonder their children don't know how to pay a bill or balance a checkbook. No wonder their kids think they deserve the world on a platter, they have been taught that you deserve everything you want, and that cost should not stop you from living the lifestyle you want.
7/1/2008 5:37:37 PM EDT
[#9]
People want nostalgia for something that never was.  They think paying top dollar for bad design from the distant past is preserving something that really matters.

A stock Stingray really sucked for transportation.  The frame could be made into a decent offroad bike, but the configuration of the original Stingray was anything but efficient or ergonomic.

If someone wants to pay $100 K for something like that, I respect their right to do so but have to laugh at the lameness.

The 1965 Stingray bikes with a five-speed stick shift was another thing altogether.  Year of the Ford Mustang.  Life was good then.
7/1/2008 5:39:44 PM EDT
[#10]
Schwinn doesn't want it back and the Smithsonian already has one and could give a shit.


Just sell the fucking thing. He keeps going on and on about how the world should get to enjoy it and not a greedy collector.

IT'S JUST A FUCKING BIKE!!!
7/1/2008 5:41:24 PM EDT
[#11]

Still have the 2" scar on my wrist from a bad jump on one of those.  

Late '60's/1970-ish model.
7/1/2008 5:46:05 PM EDT
[#12]
meh...  Someone said it in the comments in the article.  The guy from Japan probably offered 100,000 Yen, which, depending on the exchange will get $944.85 USD @ 105.837 Yen to $1 USD (todays exchange rate).  That's a more "realistic" offer.
7/1/2008 5:51:24 PM EDT
[#13]
Meh. Got mine for Christmas in about '66 or so. It had a slick on the rear, and a tiger stripe seat. Fun to ride around on just the back tire.
7/1/2008 5:57:23 PM EDT
[#14]
I had one of these,my father bought it for $89.95 new
My Mom sold at a garage sale for $20.
cgi.ebay.com/Schwinn-Grey-Ghost-Original-1971_W0QQitemZ180259327978QQihZ008QQcategoryZ156524QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
7/1/2008 6:01:05 PM EDT
[#15]

Quoted:
That was my very first bicycle and probably was in 1963.  


My first bike too . . . but probably about '65 or '66. Years later, I assembled them (and shitloads of other Schwinns) in the basement of a St. Louis bike shop as part of my part-time job in high school.
7/1/2008 6:02:46 PM EDT
[#16]

Quoted:
The two thousand dollar offers are insane. The Baby Boomers are lossing their minds trying to relive their childhood,  with all the cool stuff they didn't get for christmas.


No wonder their children don't know how to pay a bill or balance a checkbook. No wonder their kids think they deserve the world on a platter, they have been taught that you deserve everything you want, and that cost should not stop you from living the lifestyle you want.


You must be a lot of fun at a party.
7/1/2008 6:26:55 PM EDT
[#17]
I apologize if I seem a little bitter about it, I really am not. It is just that in my line of work I go into ten or more homesa day, and see exactly how screwed up some peoples priorities are. At the same time I see the amounts paid for nostalgia items from the sixties, and just don't understand it. Will having that bike take the japanese businessman back to his youth peddleing around his Tokyo neighborhood? Will it restore his youth like some kind of fountain of youth?
7/1/2008 6:34:45 PM EDT
[#18]

Quoted:
The two thousand dollar offers are insane. The Baby Boomers are lossing their minds trying to relive their childhood,  with all the cool stuff they didn't get for christmas.


No wonder their children don't know how to pay a bill or balance a checkbook. No wonder their kids think they deserve the world on a platter, they have been taught that you deserve everything you want, and that cost should not stop you from living the lifestyle you want.


Is this Soveit Russia? This isn't Soviet Russia is it? No? No. This is America. We can spend our money any way we want to. Nobody cares about "your" values.
7/1/2008 6:53:14 PM EDT
[#19]

Quoted:
I apologize if I seem a little bitter about it, I really am not. It is just that in my line of work I go into ten or more homesa day, and see exactly how screwed up some peoples priorities are. At the same time I see the amounts paid for nostalgia items from the sixties, and just don't understand it. Will having that bike take the japanese businessman back to his youth peddleing around his Tokyo neighborhood? Will it restore his youth like some kind of fountain of youth?


YOu seem jealous or something. If someone has the money who cares what they spend it on?!?