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Japanische Fahrräder und Komponenten: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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* [[Nitto]]
* [[Nitto]]
* [[Ritchey Logic]]
* [[Ritchey Logic]]
* [[Sakae Ringyo]]/S.R.)
* [[Sakae Ringyo]]/S.R.
    Formerly the #2 Japanese crank manufacture behind Sugino; currently #2 behind Shimano. Also a major maker of handlebars and stems. Laprade seatpost.  
* [[Sampson]]
* [[Sampson]]
    Pedals
* [[Sansin]]/Sunshine
* [[Sansin]]/Sunshine
    Sanshin made Sunshine hubs. My understanding is that the company picked "Sunshine" as a brand name since it sounded close to Sanshin, non-Japanese had trouble pronouncing Sanshin, and Sunshine has nice English-language connotations. Around 1985 the company seems to have dropped Sunshine and labeled its product Sanshin.
    In addition to producing product under its own label, Sanshin also acted as a subcontractor for SunTour; all SunTour-labelled hubs came from Sanshin. I don't know if there was any corporate cross-ownership, but, in the late '80s, Sanshin's president was Mamoru Kawai, the younger son of Junzo Kawai, Maeda/SunTour's chairman.
    Sanshin's factory was in Shiga-ken, maybe an hour from Maeda's offices in Sakai-shi. In the mid-'80s, Sanshin was diversifying a bit into forging auto parts. I don't know what happened to Sanshin when Maeda was purchased then went under.
    Sanshin made a beautiful ProAm model high-flange hub in the late '70s. The flanges only had 5 cut-outs, leaving a distinctive star-shaped center section. Very nice bearing quality, lots of polish and pretty anodizing.
    --Paul Brodek
* [[Shimano]]
* [[Shimano]]
* [[Silver Star]]
* [[Silver Star]]
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