They are cushioned in two ways, one by being big, the other due to their car business being so much bigger than the bike side that it can easily carry it through rough spots... Still have Halfords tho!
I know the owner quite well and none of the above apply in this case. I suspect they took risks by pushing e-bikes, but I rarely see one on or off the road so cant be selling many..Like all businesses, you have to adapt and compete, which means taking a few risks. Maybe they were offered a good price for their premises, so decided to retire. Maybe the owner fell in love with a Chinese girl/bloke and decided to move to China to be with her/him. There could be any reason for closure, not just that it wasn't a viable business.
My local ebike shop started 12 months ago. They sell a range of bikes. Sales are steadily increasing. What you say doesn't make sense unless they chose daft stock, like Kalkhoff Impulse.I know the owner quite well and none of the above apply in this case. I suspect they took risks by pushing e-bikes, but I rarely see one on or off the road so cant be selling many..
This year I have seen about 5 ebikes when out and about. I say about 5.. it's a rarety to see one.My local ebike shop started 12 months ago. They sell a range of bikes. Sales are steadily increasing. What you say doesn't make sense unless they chose daft stock, like Kalkhoff Impulse.
Just like Britain after WW2. The shop I joined in 1950 covered bikes, add-on motors for bikes and motorbikes, adding scooters when they arrived. There were just two of us in the shop, the boss and me. (More correctly the boss and I, though strangely that grammatic rule never sounds right).Like many bike shops in France they sell scooters - a heritage from the day of the moped and that means more workshop hours. In the workshop there is the retired father (keeps him out of the house and harms way...), the son and two or three apprentices.
I have always argued that the 'Me' is actually a vernacular contraction of 'Myself'Just like Britain after WW2. The shop I joined in 1950 covered bikes, add-on motors for bikes and motorbikes, adding scooters when they arrived. There were just two of us in the shop, the boss and me. (More correctly the boss and I, though strangely that grammatic rule never sounds right).
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Bike shops in Ireland at the time, I am told, would also have had a healthy business in radio repair and battery charging. Prior to rural electrification, the valve radio required batteries, of course, one being a lead acid 6 v unit to power the heaters and another being the 96v HT . The same companies that supplied bike lamps also supplied these batteries. In a real sense in a rural community, the school teacher provided legal advice, the blacksmith provided heavy engineering, and the bike shop light engineering ..Just like Britain after WW2. The shop I joined in 1950 covered bikes, add-on motors for bikes and motorbikes, adding scooters when they arrived. There were just two of us in the shop, the boss and me. (More correctly the boss and I, though strangely that grammatic rule never sounds right).
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I know where you are coming from I was once married to a French clock-maker's daughter...Bike shops in Ireland at the time, I am told, would also have had a healthy business in radio repair and battery charging. Prior to rural electrification, the valve radio required batteries, of course, one being a lead acid 6 v unit to power the heaters and another being the 96v HT . The same companies that supplied bike lamps also supplied these batteries. In a real sense in a rural community, the school teacher provided legal advice, the blacksmith provided heavy engineering, and the bike shop light engineering ..
Years ago in a Devon village, I was pushing my daughter in her push chair when a wheel fell off.Bike shops in Ireland at the time, I am told, would also have had a healthy business in radio repair and battery charging. Prior to rural electrification, the valve radio required batteries, of course, one being a lead acid 6 v unit to power the heaters and another being the 96v HT . The same companies that supplied bike lamps also supplied these batteries. In a real sense in a rural community, the school teacher provided legal advice, the blacksmith provided heavy engineering, and the bike shop light engineering ..
Same here, as a kid I remember taking the accumulator weekly to a shop for charging to ensure the wireless set (not radio in those days!) was working for another week. My very first portable radio was a valve and transistor hybrid using a 67 volt HT battery.Bike shops in Ireland at the time, I am told, would also have had a healthy business in radio repair and battery charging. Prior to rural electrification, the valve radio required batteries, of course, one being a lead acid 6 v unit to power the heaters and another being the 96v HT . The same companies that supplied bike lamps also supplied these batteries. In a real sense in a rural community, the school teacher provided legal advice, the blacksmith provided heavy engineering, and the bike shop light engineering ..
They were having problems, long before they started eBikes. Moving to that bigger store was a vanity project and the new owners took what was a great LBS (JD Cycles) and unfortunately killed itts a sad story all round really, but one that was preventable and indeed sadly predictable.I know the owner quite well and none of the above apply in this case. I suspect they took risks by pushing e-bikes, but I rarely see one on or off the road so cant be selling many..