The model, instantly recognizable by its banana seat and handlebars as high and curved as longhorns, found its initial market in young baby boomers at a time when motorcycles and souped-up vehicles of all kinds were the postwar rage.
Mr. Fritz was Schwinn’s vice president for engineering, research and
development in 1962 when he flew to Southern California to investigate a
new fad: children were buying used 20-inch bicycle frames and refitting
them with long handlebars and banana seats. Recognizing the design’s
mass-market potential, he built a prototype and came up with the name
Sting-Ray because the curved handlebars reminded him of the upswept
pectoral fins of a swimming stingray.
Many Schwinn employees were skeptical, but Mr. Fritz prevailed, and the
first run of Sting-Rays was produced in 1963. Schwinn eventually sold
more than two million Sting-Rays before the model was discontinued in
the late 1970s. Vintage models now sell for thousands of dollars.
I had a Sting-Ray in "Radiant Coppertone" just like the one above.
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