Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Hero Cycles and supplier join forces on Viking range after 30 years apart

A BIKE manufacturer has reignited a historic relationship with a supplier 30-years after the pair last worked together.

Manchester-based Indian-owned Hero Cycles is back together with Reynolds, the tubing manufacturer that provided parts for the 110-year-old Viking brand in its heyday.


Hero Cycles, the world’s biggest bicycle manufacturer by volume, revived Viking after a nearly 40-year absence when it purchased bike distributor Avocet Cycles in 2015.

Viking was then formally relaunched as part of Hero’s new UK-designed Insync range in May 2018.

Birmingham-based Reynolds provided the original parts used in Viking bikes when the brand enjoyed success in the Tour of Britain during the 1950s.

That rich heritage is being revisited in a new range of Insync bikes, the Viking Pro 400 – a limited edition range of just 400 cycles.

The range, which consists of four different models, will contain echoes of Viking’s history with features including the classic logo and vintage badge.

Designed in conjunction with Reynolds, the range is suitable for city riding and longer weekend rides.

Reynolds’ managing director Keith Noronha said the business was delighted to rekindle its relationship with Hero Cycles and the Viking brand.

He said: “Reynolds was a supplier to the original Viking brand and it’s great to see that famous name making bikes again. We’ve been working very closely with Hero on the design of the bikes, which incorporate a modern Reynolds tubing. Both companies have a long history and we’re looking forward to seeing our renewed links grow stronger in the future.”

Abhishek Pratap Singh, head of Hero Global Design, said: “We’re delighted to be working with Reynolds again after all these years and we’re aiming to revisit that classic British heritage with this new range..."

More For You

Fujitsu
Fujitsu won £1.4 bn government contracts since 2019
AFP via Getty Images

Fujitsu denies ‘parasite’ claim over Post Office contracts

TECH firm Fujitsu has defended its continued work with the UK government following the Post Office Horizon scandal, rejecting claims that it is unfairly profiting from one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in the country's history.

Speaking to MPs on the Business and Trade Committee, Fujitsu’s European chief executive Paul Patterson said the company was “not a parasite”, despite receiving around £500 million in contract extensions linked to government work.

Keep ReadingShow less