This subject seems to be hard to get sorted at a reasonable price and I think the aftersales departments of most manufacturers have not really considered an affordable replacement scheme. Any thoughts on this issue?
You don't know that Nealh, its just your opinion.Bosch prices won't come down.
It is an opinion, but it's fairly well justified. What happens is the specification of the battery keeps increasing, which drives the market and the price upwards. You can make the argument that over the years the price per Wh has decreased, but battery prices always go upwards. It's just that you get more for your money.You don't know that Nealh, its just your opinion.
With petrol & diesel car being withdrawn from sale within 10 years, electric vehicles will have to come down significantly in cost and e bikes plus their batteries may benefit from that. Let's hope so
No need to panic. Sodium cells are just around the corner, and when they expire you can open them up and sprinkle the insides on your dinner, which will not only make your food taste better, but it'll also tone up your body.With current 18650 cells the most efficient mah rating and current appears to be 2500 - 2900/3000 mah, only one cell above above this is a really good cell and that is LG's MJ1 at 3400 - 3500mah, the Samsung 35e & Sanyo GA are not as good esp on life cycles. The newer 21700 cells are at the 5000mah level and the Samsung 50e looks a very good cell for ebike use, whether we see any higher mah cells that are truly better we will have to see.
The production for all these billions of cells will be using up considerable resources to produce and at a not very economical way. The world demand and activists role in changing the way fossil fuels are used for power sources will compare little in the future for next generations who will have to deal with mounting lithium recycling and reclamation. The other side may not be greener ethically.
Agreed. I guess that ebike batteries will first get smaller and smaller (with no price change - that's the current stage we're at), until we hit some magical 'adequate' size and power, and at that flex point the price decreases instead, since it becomes a commodity item. There's a limit to how small and how powerful you want an ebike to be.Just tonight on Ch4 a Tory minister quoted car battery costs have come down from $77,000 9 years ago to $11,000 today.
If thats true who can tell how e bike batteries will go pricewise if the huge e bike uptake in the UK continues.