Here is my story of my experience of the world of electric bikes. Having an occupation that locks me to a chair for many hours I decided that I would increase my excercise by cycling to golf. The journey is only just over 6 miles but is very hilly. I am not talking little bumps but serious and long hills. I started out with a Schwinn Tailwind. Great price and the build quality and fittings were of a very high standard. First trip the battery gave up after 5 miles. Bike came in at around 29kg and cycling up a steep hill with no power nearly killed me. It went back. Next was a Tonaro Big Hit. Great concept and fantastic customer support. Unfortunately the rear drop outs had been fitted or machined out of square. It ended up with the rear brake binding or not working at all. Another bike that went back. I then thought I would be smart and buy a decent bike and convert it. My thinking was I could get a fairly light weight mountain bike and have control over the standard and quality of the cycle parts. I settled on a Trek 6000. Very nice bike. I had seen it on a Bionx promotional video and went for the Bionx kit. Big mistake as the shallow rear dropouts were not man enough for the job. Back that goes. I have then been waiting on the Daahub to materialise. I have even offered to do real world testing. Lots of promises but nothing materialised. I have looked at several of the other kit options but did not really want a rear rack battery. I loved the look of the Oxydrive but am yet to see any real world reviews and the latest situation is that they have not got cut out switches that I can adapt for use on hydraulic brakes. By now the unused Trek is ten months old and is gathering dust. I thought I would sell it and go for one of the newer Bosch powered kits. Looking at complete bikes with decent specification I am now looking at a price range in excess of £2,600.00. At this stage my wife says why are you bothering with all? Why not just get a small motorbike. Get to golf more often and get your exercise there. This made me have a rethink. I have looked at a few Honda 125 models. What then dawned on me was the disproportionately high cost of the pedelecs over the motorcycle. If we look at the same price bracket you can get a very high quality and well developed motorcycle that is cheap to run with minimal environmental impact. Now I am torn. Go for the expensive pedelec with no great track record or a small motorcycle that has been going for years. Is it the scale of production that pushes the cost of ebikes to such a high level or are we being taken advantage of as niche market consumers?