Linked by David Adams on Wed 1st Aug 2012 16:53 UTC
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RE[3]: practical electric bike
by ferrix on Tue 2nd Aug 2011 03:03
in reply to "RE[2]: practical electric bike"
Do yourself a favour and stay away from those cheap made in china e-bikes, as they are complete crap and when they break, no repair shop will touch them... believe me, I speak from experience!
Either splurge 2,000+ bucks for a decent model with decent dealer support, or roughly for the same money get a scooter/second hand motorcycle - much more useful proposition. Again, speaking from experience.
RE[4]: practical electric bike
by Splinter on Tue 2nd Aug 2011 09:14
in reply to "RE[3]: practical electric bike"
RE[4]: practical electric bike
by braddock on Tue 2nd Aug 2011 17:07
in reply to "RE[3]: practical electric bike"
Do yourself a favour and stay away from those cheap made in china e-bikes, as they are complete crap and when they break, no repair shop will touch them... believe me, I speak from experience!
Either splurge 2,000+ bucks for a decent model...
Either splurge 2,000+ bucks for a decent model...
The eZips/iZips sold in Walmart and Target are the low end brands of the American company Currie Technologies which also make $2k+ models and has a dealer and service network. My iZip is built like a tank.





Member since:
2005-07-13
Small electric motors are very cheap to make and it takes a very small amount of power to help you along.
An $80 weed trimmer (gas or electric) would produce enough power.
With all these advancements in technology I am amazed that combining these things is still so bloody expensive. It should cost $250 to combine a $90 bicycle with the engine from an $80 weed trimmer, not $3,000
Their is two major components you left out... batteries and electronic controller. A controller should be under $100.
However batteries are still not cheap. Realistically you would be looking around $800 - $1500 for a good sized battery pack for off road rough terrain. $300 to $500 for commuting...
So Commuting...
90 + 80 + 100 + 300 = $570 for a cheap commuter...
and that is about what the go for. EG http://www.value-e-bikes.com.au/
Now the mountain bikes (serious ones) start at around $800 or more for the base bike.
800 + 80 + 100 + 800 = $1780 for the cheapest "good" off roader...
and again you can get them for that. EG http://www.hi-powercycles.com/category.sc?categoryId=10