I owned an original 1990 Fat Chance Yo Eddy in "grellow" for 12 years. Graftons, Syncros, Suntour, Shimano XT, Specialized, Mavic, Ritchey, Nuke Proof hubs, Gary Helfrich ti bars. I cried when I sold it. I should have donated it to a museum.
Keith,
That really hurts. What a great-great bike. Plenty of style, great engineering and craftsmanship with a sense of history. Chris Chance was one of the founders back in the day.
I'm a big fan of Gary Helfrich and interestingly my new Ti IBIS Mountain Trials has some of Gary's influence when Gary made the move to the left coast and joined Scot Nicol at IBIS.
Anyways Gary is an interesting guy that is an amazing legend. Here is a guy that threw away a full scholarship at MIT so he could be a roadie for Aerosmith. After that he decided to work at Fat City.
"I slowly floated from being a drug-crazed roadie into becoming a framebuilder. The interesting thing about Fat City back then was that it was honest-to God rock and roll. The only difference was that you didn't have to get on and off a bus every night. You'd work, 16-17 hours straight, 'til you just dropped. Then you'd get up and start all over again. The working conditions sucked... everything about the place sucked. I never had more fun working anywhere," Gary said.
Then there is this epic tale of how Scot Nicol gets Gary to move to California. The deal was that Scot would pay for the boxcar shipping of all of Gary's stuff across the country, but Gary exceeds the boxcar's 40 ton limit and loads it with 80 tons of machine tools. At one point this overloaded box car is somewhere in Kansas doing 100 mph, and luckily no one got killed.
Scot Nicol is a real funny guy. On this one picture you are directed to mouse click on the stain on Gary's shirt to get a PDF of the article.
At IBIS Gary developed internally butted Ti tubing "Moron Tubing" for more thickness on the ends (When Gary was at Merlyn the tubing was externally butted). Scot had already designed the "Mojo," but with Gary soon there were "Ti Mojo's."
The 1994 Ti IBIS Mountain Trials I now own is the result of that collaboration and features a "Hand Job" for the rear brake cable. This bike is a lot like the Trials bike that Chris Chance developed because it features a 24 inch rear wheel, a 26 inch front wheel, and aggressive geometry.
My forensics indicate that my bike was once owned by a guy named Todd who is one of the owner's of Era Ski And Bike in Lancaster Pennsylvania, and Todd says that he bought the first Mountain Trials ever built in titanium. I've been in contact with Scot, who is a NORBA Champion and is in the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame; and Scot says that his guess that they made between 1 to five, but in fact I might have the only one.
Wish you still had your own piece of history. I still own my steel version of the Mountain Trials that dates back to 1989.
Cal