I agree - in fact I think there's more than just conservatism. when I lock my bog standard btwin triban with oxygen kit to a lamppost where I live with I must admit a hefty kryptonite lock in the town main street I usually get a least three or four comments (usually one nice one from someone interested in electric bikes, two or three wondering, with degrees of irony/sarcasm, "what a hefty lock it is?" etc etc). I really wouldn't want to go through the same experience with all the additional attention a fat bike would bring. to say British culture doesn't approve of extraversion might be an understatementCould be a market among farmers who have to do early morning rounds of their properties and not wake up people on the estate.
But British people generally are so conservative, they mostly drive samey cars which are all grey or black or blue and invisible -this is the country which disapproved of unusual people and things for years because they were just different. I don't know how much that has changed. I guess all trends have to start somehow, maybe WWC could loan some of these to Towie bods or young bands to play around with and so get some photos in the press and on twitter.
some pretty scary statements in there... and a lack of understanding of what an MTB is about for most people.Comments from Wai Won Ching, eZeebike CEO.
Ironing out the bugs and recent fad ? Fat bikes have been around for more than 5 years from Surly, only 2 years ago it started to become more popular all of a sudden. No need to iron out any bugs with eZee, that is the difference. We have 15 years of experience with designing ebikes. It took me 2 years to sort out every detail.
The Haibike and KTM are at about 2700+, whereas eZee is at 1395 about 1/2 the price with really comparable specs and more. Even if I up-grade to those 10 speed sprockets and derailleur and use Magura MTe hydraulic brakes with electrical cut off with cost another 150 GBP.
Regarding other electric Fat bikes, do they have lights ? Mudguards ? Kick Stand ?
If they go into the rain or muddy fields they will be covered with mud and dirt.
As for the tyres,those that Haibike and KTM hare is a big mistake.
I rode them, they have big studs, and terrible vibration on the road that really tickle your butt.
Our tyres are smooth and specially compounded for snow and low temp. I could have tried Schwalbe too, but on testing it was not good, nor did I choose the clones from China. I bought from Vee Rubber in Thailand, this is the best fat bike tyre. There is a huge difference between Big Apple which are basically slicks, 2.35" vs 3.5 " for fat bike.
I believe that I made a bike with great performance, quality, reliability, and value for money that is a match for bikes that are twice the price
Best regards
W W Ching
Latest e-Rex photos, full spec will be added to Cyclezee website later today.
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Seriously you make me laugh. Nowhere does WWC mention an MTB.We had a similar discussion recently. It appears they've put an RRP on it that high, but no dealers actually sell it for that. They do this so they can promise dealers a certain margin that in reality isn't achievable. Its essentially trade based marketing by maths.
some pretty scary statements in there... and a lack of understanding of what an MTB is about for most people.
How within the space of 20 words he can criticise a bike because you'll get muddy riding it offroad and then say the tyres aren't suitable for road! Its a MOUNTAIN BIKE for riding in lots of conditions, not a product made to look a bit like a fat bike in the hope of trading off the concept.
and f.y.i... the Haibike is £3999.99 by the looks of it. Can't quite work out why. The KTM Macina Freeze is £2849.99 - so a pretty big difference there.
But you can't compare either of these to the eZee... because I'm afraid that isn't a fat bike. Its a bike with big tyres, which is a very different beast and that bike is proabably aimed at people who want to ride round town and looking like they are on a fat bike.
If you want to get one, and want to put this guys comments that his bike is a match for the bikes twice the price, I'm sure we can find loads of people to independently test that claim. I'll arrange the KTM and I'm sure its possible to source a Haibike.
That's not big! This is big, 60 teeth:That front chain ring looks huge, how many teeth? I guess only way to ride that bike is on full power?
OMG Tony, that must be the fastest eZee Quando on the planetThat's not big! This is big, 60 teeth:
It is indeed, great bike. Wanting to still pedal at 30mph with it's 20" wheels, the 60 tooth chain ring was the only option, short of a 5 tooth rear sprocket.OMG Tony, that must be the fastest eZee Quando on the planet
I love loads of bikes, and I just spent two days at Eurobike playing a very good game of "what would I buy"... and I am very very much not dismissive of many many things that aren't KTM. I worked for 20+ years in the bike industry before I started working for KTM, and anyone / everyone who knows me will back me u on this. If I product is good, no matter what the brand I'll happily praise it. And it wasn't me that started this... you posted mentioning KTM and Haibike, I've just responded.Seriously you make me laugh. Nowhere does WWC mention an MTB.
As for the rest of your derisory comments, they are just what I would expect, totally dismissive of anything that isn't KTM.
I own this bike, the Lectric Cycles 750W. It can be fun; but you really have to keep changing the tyre pressures to match the mission. In an urban setting with around 22psi it rolls quite nicely (on my Husker Dü tyres) and shrugs off super wide grates, potholes etc. On steep downhill loose shale an air pressure of 4psi allows the tyre to conform around the rocks and always keep a secure footprint on something hard. The grip can be astonishing. On fresh soft powder the bike is all sorts of fun, but on wet snow I could not stay upright. On soft mud it glides over the top where my Haibike AMT Pro digs in. But the bike is so heavy and then you realise how a good suspension spoils us. It is really tough on the arms but adding suspension forks would increase the weight even more. I have the Nuvinci hub on mine and the pedals run out before 20mph. It is great to follow it up a mountain seeing the rear tyre deform due to the power and the terrain but never spins. Sadly the speed sensor robs from me all the pleasure as the Bosch system has spoiled me.