Sup /n/erds.
A woman is having me tune up this Yo Eddy, make some adjustments and stuff for her (Haven't done it yet, hence the flat tires). I know more about road bikes, and not much about mountain, but what little searching I did says that these were pretty sought after bikes. She got it in Montana, and knows its a great bike, but I didn't hear much more about it. Curious if you guys know more.
Also, not sure if it's obvious, but this is one from the 90's, not the recent return that the company had
>>991626
>i said id fix it but then i heard it might be worth mad benjamins
Tyrone, give the woman her bike back before you do something she'll regret.
>>991629
I used to work with her, she knows where I live, I can't steal it. Nor would I. It's way too damn small for me, nor am I a monkey who would rip someone off. I like bikes, and I'm doing a favor.
>>991626
Sadly no, it's not worth more than any other 90's hardtail. The number of people in the world who value/collect 90's mountain biking stuff is extremely small to begin with, and you really lots of bling machined and anodized parts AND a really special frame to have a 90's mtb worth significant money. Fat Chance bikes were highly regarded, it's true, but that period in which they were sought after only lasted for a few years before MTB technology moved on.
>>991626
here you go. I used this new thing called GOOGLE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=11&v=0OugSJXrLeY
http://mombat.org/MOMBAT/BikeHistoryPages/Fat_Chance.html
>>991626
Fat Chance bikes are pretty cool, but that one isn't really anything neat. For the right buyer, you could get some money, but that bike is worth more as a fun ride for the nice lady who owns it.
>>991626
There is a guy on /n/ called Marco Rodriguez who REALLY wants one of these. You should sell it to him.