As they say in business school, competition is very, very good. And thats what youre seeing here. The bike brands you mention are all sort of upstarts,” trying various distribution and business models to undercut the more established players such as Trek and Cannondale. Scattante, for instance, is the house brand” for the Performance bike shops. The frames are made, for the most part, in Taiwan, at factories that have plenty of experience and, in fact, probably make some frames for the big guys. Habanero is just a small shop where a guy is passionate about bikes and wants to give customers good value on titanium bikes. And Leopard offers carbon-frame bikes on a Web-only store, saving the overhead of running a shop.
Scattante CFR road bike

Although these guys dont get a lot of review space yet, there are some signs of life as they become more well-known. Our very own Outside magazine recently named a Leopard road bike as a killer value” in the annual Buyers Guidenot a bad recommendation.
So, Id trust any of these brands. Last winter, for instance, I purchased a Weyless-brand hardtail mountain-bike frame from Supergothen owned by Performance, and now absorbed into the parent companyand think its just great. Light, stiff, and well-made. No complaints at all. You can get a Leopard (www.leopardcycles.com) L1 carbon-frame bike for $2,300 with Shimano Ultegra components. Thats a smoking deal, if ever there was one. Or, Performance (www.performancebike.com) has the Scattante CFR carbon bike, also with Ultegra, on sale right now for just under $1,900. Or, price out Habanero (www.habcycles.com) titanium cycles from $2,000 (with perfectly serviceable Shimano 105) to $3,400 (with super-sexy Campy Record). Too hot!
The votes are in: Check out the winners of Outside‘s 2006 Gear of the Year awards, including the year’s hottest road bike.