Having attended Eurobike at Friedrichshaven,Southern Germany. Exhibited at 50 plus beurs,Utrecht,Holland and exhibiting at the Cycle Show,NEC this coming week it seemed an opportune moment to consider what each country requires of their e-bike.
The Germans seek high tech bikes which often have equipment they don't really need(Shimano 27 speed XT gears on an e-bike?),Bosch is leading the change to crank drive and 2,300 to 3,000 euros is the norm,they only like new bikes and high price is seen as the norm.
The Dutch are different they are completely risk averse,everything about the bike must be 100% in their control with maintenance contacts and insurance the norm....many customers described the Kudos bikes as too fast(?). There was not a crank drive in sight and not likely to be required,I respect the country is flat but this appeared to be mainly that they did not want anything complicated and crank drive was viewed as such. They wanted a deal but in the region of 1,200 to 1,700 euros was seen as cheap. On the Sachs bikes stand every bike was a step through,even fit males prefered the step through style...our mountain bikes were seen as sport use only and not for everyday usage.
Our experience of trading in the UK is primarily about price,the market is not yet mature enough to understand the e-bike concept never mind the subtleties of specification,the prefered price level is still between £700-£1000,say 800-1150 euros.
I suspect enthusiasts on the pedelec site do not represent the norm of the first time or second time e-biker,they are infinitely more knowlegeable.
I learnt a lot about the differences between these markets and no style of bike can satisfy all three.
Those who think that a cheap crank drive unit will be available soon could be mistaken...the cheaper Asian manufactured units just don't meet the quality levels to compete with the Bosch motor and the higher quality Asian units are so close to the price point of Bosch as to not justify the risk of seeking an alternative.The Dutch market does not want crank drive and most in the UK are not prepared to pay for it,so crank drive will be primarily a German requirement.
Dave
KudosCycles
The Germans seek high tech bikes which often have equipment they don't really need(Shimano 27 speed XT gears on an e-bike?),Bosch is leading the change to crank drive and 2,300 to 3,000 euros is the norm,they only like new bikes and high price is seen as the norm.
The Dutch are different they are completely risk averse,everything about the bike must be 100% in their control with maintenance contacts and insurance the norm....many customers described the Kudos bikes as too fast(?). There was not a crank drive in sight and not likely to be required,I respect the country is flat but this appeared to be mainly that they did not want anything complicated and crank drive was viewed as such. They wanted a deal but in the region of 1,200 to 1,700 euros was seen as cheap. On the Sachs bikes stand every bike was a step through,even fit males prefered the step through style...our mountain bikes were seen as sport use only and not for everyday usage.
Our experience of trading in the UK is primarily about price,the market is not yet mature enough to understand the e-bike concept never mind the subtleties of specification,the prefered price level is still between £700-£1000,say 800-1150 euros.
I suspect enthusiasts on the pedelec site do not represent the norm of the first time or second time e-biker,they are infinitely more knowlegeable.
I learnt a lot about the differences between these markets and no style of bike can satisfy all three.
Those who think that a cheap crank drive unit will be available soon could be mistaken...the cheaper Asian manufactured units just don't meet the quality levels to compete with the Bosch motor and the higher quality Asian units are so close to the price point of Bosch as to not justify the risk of seeking an alternative.The Dutch market does not want crank drive and most in the UK are not prepared to pay for it,so crank drive will be primarily a German requirement.
Dave
KudosCycles