At the risk of being a neanderthal or luddite........
With battery problems and now motor problems I start to believe Kalkhoff have taken their eye of the ball, with the latest breeds poorer that the original panasonic powered units. Having supposedly "upgraded" (i use the term reservedly) my wife's original 2008 Pro Connect to a Tasman, I follow with trepidation the unravelling stories on here of the newer Impulse generation of bikes. Development for its own sake or in pursuit of not needed torque or greater range seems to be at the expense of reliability. I don't believe the developments are in response to customer's needs or demands.
I cannot keep her off her old bike, which still sings along and:
1. the battery goes to sleep on the bike in the winter and loses little of it's charge,
2. the motor has been faultless for 12,000 miles+, it has all the torque she wants to handle,
3. the 10 amp battery lasts her between 150 and 200 miles given the way we cycle with assistance mainly for hills and wind, and occasionally tired legs at the end of 30 to 40 mile rides.
4. The battery is 7 years old, been recharged just over 150 times, still takes the full 10 amp/hr from exhausted to full charge, and shows 5 lights on the cell test. Generally recharge at the 3 or 4 lights on stage depending upon time interval or next ride distance.
I'm having to persuade her to use the new Tasman, just so that any faults show up within the warranty period. Even then round trips in excess of 400+ miles to get anything sorted, is not something I've had to deal with in the past 7 years withe the Panasonics.
Thus, I firmly believe the build quality on the earliest Kalkhoffs was significantly better, Kalkhoff are guilty of development for it's own sake. Also the paint jobs on the earlier bikes were so much more attractive.
It will a long time I suspect that I will even consider "upgrading" my ProConnect 2008, or my ProConnect S 2010, and certainly not before I am reassured that battery/motor issues are resolved. Having tried her new Tasman, I begin to think a better upgrade for me would be to find, a good, low mileage, well cared for panasonic powered ProConnect S.
With battery problems and now motor problems I start to believe Kalkhoff have taken their eye of the ball, with the latest breeds poorer that the original panasonic powered units. Having supposedly "upgraded" (i use the term reservedly) my wife's original 2008 Pro Connect to a Tasman, I follow with trepidation the unravelling stories on here of the newer Impulse generation of bikes. Development for its own sake or in pursuit of not needed torque or greater range seems to be at the expense of reliability. I don't believe the developments are in response to customer's needs or demands.
I cannot keep her off her old bike, which still sings along and:
1. the battery goes to sleep on the bike in the winter and loses little of it's charge,
2. the motor has been faultless for 12,000 miles+, it has all the torque she wants to handle,
3. the 10 amp battery lasts her between 150 and 200 miles given the way we cycle with assistance mainly for hills and wind, and occasionally tired legs at the end of 30 to 40 mile rides.
4. The battery is 7 years old, been recharged just over 150 times, still takes the full 10 amp/hr from exhausted to full charge, and shows 5 lights on the cell test. Generally recharge at the 3 or 4 lights on stage depending upon time interval or next ride distance.
I'm having to persuade her to use the new Tasman, just so that any faults show up within the warranty period. Even then round trips in excess of 400+ miles to get anything sorted, is not something I've had to deal with in the past 7 years withe the Panasonics.
Thus, I firmly believe the build quality on the earliest Kalkhoffs was significantly better, Kalkhoff are guilty of development for it's own sake. Also the paint jobs on the earlier bikes were so much more attractive.
It will a long time I suspect that I will even consider "upgrading" my ProConnect 2008, or my ProConnect S 2010, and certainly not before I am reassured that battery/motor issues are resolved. Having tried her new Tasman, I begin to think a better upgrade for me would be to find, a good, low mileage, well cared for panasonic powered ProConnect S.
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