I have ordered a Gocycle, and not to make a "statement" either. I have owned various bicycles in the past, including Brompton, Airnimal and Dahon. From practical commuting experience I must be on the same wavelength as the Gocycle designer because all the design details make sense to me.
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Enclosed drive train - I don't know what your experiences are but everytime it rains I end up with a thick layer of oil and grime on the chain and wheels. So I decided the next bike I own would have an enclosed chain and disk brakes. If this bicycle is to succeed it has to sell to people who are not already cyclists and who wants to wash their form of transport every time it rains? The Gocycle wheels are easily cleaned too.
Gearing - The 3 speed Brompton was too highly geared for me so I rarely used 3rd gear. The Gocycle gears are probably fine for its intended purpose - urban situations. I may want to shorten the cranks slightly (if possible) so that would help.
Electric Assist - Even in quite cool conditions you can work up a sweat, so electric assist is useful to go to work. The return journey can be made under human power. That motor is noisy but has the capability of going over 30+ mph if derestricted through the USB port, so that is a good tradeoff.
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Who knows what the current manufacturing costs are, but in theory the manufacturing process used "Thixomoulding" gives a low per unit cost, so if it ever gets manufactured in large volumes in Taiwan we can expect prices to fall. This could be how all bicycles are made in the future.
I am a Velovision reader but ordered one week before that offer was publicised. The codes are advertised on a banner ad at the top of Velovision's website. Until the end of January you can order the electric assist or non electric assist versions for £795 and £595 respectively.
I note Alex Moulton rejected a monocoque design in the 60s because of noise, so I wonder if the Gocycle frame will have the same problem since it is basically a hollow chamber.
I'd like to see a more stealthy case for the Gocycle that converts to a bicycle trailer when you reach your destination. Doing all that within the normal 20Kg airline baggage weight limit is a challenge.