Road Test/Bike Review (1986) MIYATA 210
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Central Florida, USA
Posts: 1,651
Bikes: Litespeed (9); Slingshot (6); Specialized (2); Kestrel (2); Centurion (1); Cervelo (1); FELT (1); Trek (2)
Mentioned: 28 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 365 Post(s)
Liked 1,936 Times
in
669 Posts
Road Test/Bike Review (1986) MIYATA 210
From Bicycle Guide, Mar 1986.









__________________
WTB: Slingshot bicycle promotional documents (catalog, pamphlets, etc).
WTB: American Cycling May - Aug, Oct, Dec 1966.
WTB: Bicycle Guide issues 1984 (any); Jun 1987; Jul, Nov/Dec 1992; Apr 1994; 1996 -1998 (any)
WTB: Bike World issue Jun 1974.
WTB: Slingshot bicycle promotional documents (catalog, pamphlets, etc).
WTB: American Cycling May - Aug, Oct, Dec 1966.
WTB: Bicycle Guide issues 1984 (any); Jun 1987; Jul, Nov/Dec 1992; Apr 1994; 1996 -1998 (any)
WTB: Bike World issue Jun 1974.
Likes For SpeedofLite:
#2
ambulatory senior
Join Date: Dec 2016
Location: Peoria Il
Posts: 5,490
Bikes: Bob Jackson World Tour, Falcon and lots of other bikes.
Mentioned: 68 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1694 Post(s)
Liked 2,497 Times
in
1,202 Posts
Excellent read!
#3
curmudgineer
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Chicago SW burbs
Posts: 4,429
Bikes: 2 many 2 fit here
Mentioned: 8 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 263 Post(s)
Liked 108 Times
in
68 Posts
Very thoughtfully designed and appointed. I agree with the reviewers about the half-step gearing. The chainstays could be a little longer, for better weight distribution and heel clearance with panniers.
Likes For old's'cool:
#4
Senior Member
I especially enjoy reading about C / V brands and models of bikes when I actually have one very near to the subject of the review. I have a 1985 Miyata 210 and find it to be a very nice bike. I have it set up for “day touring” and sadly, haven’t done much of that with it. (Perhaps this season!) Was a bit distressed to read that the ‘85 SunTour groupset was “kicked to the curb” and replaced with Shimano components. Won’t deny that the Shimano stuff might be an improvement but I do find the SunTour components certainly adequate and most definitely won’t be “upgrading”.
Thanks to the OP for posting the review!
Thanks to the OP for posting the review!
Likes For sovende:
#5
ambulatory senior
Join Date: Dec 2016
Location: Peoria Il
Posts: 5,490
Bikes: Bob Jackson World Tour, Falcon and lots of other bikes.
Mentioned: 68 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1694 Post(s)
Liked 2,497 Times
in
1,202 Posts
I especially enjoy reading about C / V brands and models of bikes when I actually have one very near to the subject of the review. I have a 1985 Miyata 210 and find it to be a very nice bike. I have it set up for “day touring” and sadly, haven’t done much of that with it. (Perhaps this season!) Was a bit distressed to read that the ‘85 SunTour groupset was “kicked to the curb” and replaced with Shimano components. Won’t deny that the Shimano stuff might be an improvement but I do find the SunTour components certainly adequate and most definitely won’t be “upgrading”.
Thanks to the OP for posting the review!
Thanks to the OP for posting the review!
#6
Senior Member

#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Toledo Ohio
Posts: 1,162
Bikes: 1964 Frejus,1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport, 1983 Trek 700, 1985 Ironman, 1985 Torpado, 1983 Peugeot UO14, 1989 Miyata 1000LT and others
Mentioned: 18 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 428 Post(s)
Liked 473 Times
in
268 Posts
I like the way the light action shifts, but wonder about durability. A co-op short cage one I have had the parallelogram tension spring pop out of place turning the unit floppy and useless. I could see no way to get the spring reattached with its location. I saw another floppy one at the co-op too. I wouldn’t want it to happen on a ride. Pretty derailleur though and it is indeed light shifting. The 210 is a real value too, as is the 215GT.
#8
Senior Member
What a delightful find! An old Miyata 210 of this exact model year was my first “quality” bike, acquired at the secondhand bike shop near the university back in December 2004. I made a couple small changes, mostly removing the original levers and padding for aero levers and vinyl bar tape, plus adding a set of fenders and some new tires. I otherwise kept it in stock condition when my friend and I set off up the Maine coast the following summer. We got most of the way to Mount Desert Island but my knee paid the price for the gearing and we had to abandon the trip a week in. It was indeed a very nice, lively ride that behaved fairly well when loaded (it was a bit flexible for the weight I had loaded up on both ends) but was plenty of fun when unencumbered. Sadly I only got about a year and a half out of it. First the original fork rusted out and failed - only the front rack held it together. It took me a day or so to realize why it was vibrating so badly under braking! Luckily the cranky old guy at the local bike shop had an old Nishiki fork that fit, and he liked me, so I got that fixed up. But not long after that, I ran into the back of a convertible at a traffic light when I had my head down and bent up the front end. I replaced it with a Surly LHT - a good bike, but it was a little like going from a Honda Fit to a Chevy Suburban. Similar cargo capacity, but a rather different driving experience. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

Kittery, Maine, 2005.

Kittery, Maine, 2005.
Likes For grolby:
#9
Ride, Wrench, Swap, Race
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Northern California
Posts: 8,738
Bikes: Cheltenham-Pedersen racer, Boulder F/S Paris-Roubaix, Varsity racer, '52 Christophe, '62 Continental, '92 Merckx, '75 Limongi, '76 Presto, '72 Gitane SC, '71 Schwinn SS, etc.
Mentioned: 127 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 1370 Post(s)
Liked 929 Times
in
650 Posts
I have one of these bikes tucked away, but in beautiful gold paint, 58cm and in brand-new condition.
Almost too nice to ride and the tires are also even still original so it just hangs there.
The paint quality is quite something, would do justice to a high-end bike.
I had two such identical bikes, but sold the more used one over ten years ago. Rode the one I still have just one time.
Touring bikes literally flooded into our foothills thrift stores during the early 2000's.
Some, like one clean blue 1977 Miyata 1000, went out the back door with a FREE sign on it!
For actual riding, my Six-Ten , Seral and Parabola are always waiting for their next on- and off-road adventure.
Almost too nice to ride and the tires are also even still original so it just hangs there.
The paint quality is quite something, would do justice to a high-end bike.
I had two such identical bikes, but sold the more used one over ten years ago. Rode the one I still have just one time.
Touring bikes literally flooded into our foothills thrift stores during the early 2000's.
Some, like one clean blue 1977 Miyata 1000, went out the back door with a FREE sign on it!
For actual riding, my Six-Ten , Seral and Parabola are always waiting for their next on- and off-road adventure.
#10
good cheap fun
Join Date: Jan 2022
Location: Lansing, MI
Posts: 37
Bikes: 2017 Specialized Fuse, '75 Schwinn Voyageur II, '86 Schwinn LeTour, '86 Cannondale SR800 pre-Black Lightning, '90s Cannondale H200, '90 Trek 720, '76 Schwinn Super Le Tour
Mentioned: 1 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 6 Post(s)
Liked 33 Times
in
11 Posts
Great reading as usual. I've run into a couple light action derailleurs at the co-op before and always wondered what the cable saver arm was meant for!
#11
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: Toledo Ohio
Posts: 1,162
Bikes: 1964 Frejus,1972 Fuji Newest, 1973 Schwinn Super Sport, 1983 Trek 700, 1985 Ironman, 1985 Torpado, 1983 Peugeot UO14, 1989 Miyata 1000LT and others
Mentioned: 18 Post(s)
Tagged: 0 Thread(s)
Quoted: 428 Post(s)
Liked 473 Times
in
268 Posts