My new £1100 Ebco USR55 crank-drive hybrid e-bike against (nearly) £11,000 speakers in the playroom. Oh, and the Monitor Audio Apex speaker on the wall next to the home cinema screen come in at about another £2500 for the set (I'd forgotten about those).so let us all see it then speakers and amps and ur setup what you have for real
If it was, you'd definitely win.This isn't about "mine being bigger than yours".
Can I remind you of your first post in this thread "All the Bosch CEO is saying to me is that you'd be a fool to spend £2000/£3000/£4000+ on an electric bike"My new £1100 Ebco USR55 crank-drive hybrid e-bike against (nearly) £11,000 speakers in the playroom.
This isn't about "mine being bigger than yours". It's about making personal choices,
What part of "All the Bosch CEO is saying to me.." don't you understand?Can I remind you of your first post in this thread "All the Bosch CEO is saying to me is that you'd be a fool to spend £2000/£3000/£4000+ on an electric bike"
That's hilarious, you call people fools for spending lots of money on a bike and what do you do with your speakers??? And then you say "It's about making personal choices" having called them fools.
Have you looked in a mirror recently?
Oh, and I hear that Audio Thesis are working on a replacement for your Usher CP-8871 speakers due out early next year.
Exactly. I've sold 10 year old "classic" amplifiers for much more than I paid too; e-bikes become obsolete and almost worthless from season to season. Is there a "classic" e-bike yet that appreciates?have been offers more than double to what i had paid for them cant say that for the bike tho
give it 100 years but i doubt you will ever get what you paid for it new same as computers i paid 3k each for my xeon cpus but there worth about 30 quid each today.Exactly. I've sold 10 year old "classic" amplifiers for much more than I paid too; e-bikes become obsolete and almost worthless from season to season. Is there a "classic" e-bike yet that appreciates?
Hmmmm. Its not as if we are now in the true 'early adopters' stage. Ebikes are certainly changing, but its more of a case of refining, or entering new market segments, rather than evolving - at least in the case of the base technology.All the Bosch CEO is saying to me is that you'd be a fool to spend £2000/£3000/£4000+ on an electric bike now given their current drive systems are already obsolete and won't be worth a crap in a couple of years time once their much slimmer, lighter, more powerful motors/enhanced systems hit the market shortly.
It's exactly why I wouldn't spend much over a grand on a crank-driven e-bike until the tech has been optimised/stabilised, and there's still a good way to go if we believe the Bosch CEO in that article.
Remember that large companies are motivated by profit. They use marketing as a tool to convince people that their max-profit solution is the one that they need. It's competition that keeps them on their toes and forces them to make improvements. They will never change more than they have to. It's only when they can see/foresee profits going down or when they can see a chance for bigger profits that they think about changes.I could see the boffins at Bosch coming up with something the size and weight of the Fazua motor in just a couple of years - but maybe with 100Nm torque and weighing under 2kg that fitted into a pretty much standard size bike frame as the Fazua does. It's weight and size loss, with more powerful, discrete in-frame batteries (again as Fazua, where the frame retains a pretty standard dimension).
If Dyson can do much the same with a vacuum cleaner motor (i.e. smaller, more powerful, more efficient, and much lighter) it can't be beyond the wit of the Germans.
It's just fashion.Spot on, crank motors and their controllers is where the action is. Why has development of hub motors and their controllers stalled?