Hi Neil,
I'm new to this forum and have just bought a Magic Pie kit from China and got it for £150 cheaper than off Alien Ocean and that includes shipping and custom charges from the shipper. However, GM's quality control is notoriously bad. My kit actually arrived with a rip in the rim. Luckily i contacted a company in Liverpool who use GM's bits for E-wheel chairs and they sent me a replacement rim and they claimed a replacement from China themseleves which was very good of them. Although i had to pay someone to resspoke the new rim.
In retrospect, would i have upfronted the extra £150 to get a UK warranty...... Yes probably. It has been stressful tracking the parcel from China, communication with China is very very limited. It very unnerving when a 3" rip in the rim has not been spotted during manufacture. it makes you wonder how well put together the rest of the kit is.
If you want speed i suggest you go for their 1000w 901 pro kit as ths will be faster, quieter, lighter, smaller and more discrete than the huge magic pie. The magic pie is designed to have more torque for getting up hills easier and to pull heavier loads so it could be a good choice if you are on the heavier side.
You will add about 13kg's to a bike with a magic pie kit if you choose the 48v 12ah battery. most people report about 23mph on a pie on the flat with no pedalling. Th controller that comes with the kit is meant to be a 50amp max current, but it seems it has a safety limit on it to more like 20A max.
you get a USBcable that fits to the controller and you can get software free from the GM website which allows you to change the current and the voltage. But as the controller is limited so low changing them will make little difference. most people report changing the voltage from 48 down to 24v will give a bit more speed and torque, but again you'd have to make sure the motor is not getting hot.
I'm still in the final stages of setting up the pie so have not tested it yet. But even before riding it i'm wishing i'd bought the 1000w 901 pro kit instead, as it's quieterand has a more discrete smaller motor. i also went for the internal controller on the pie but this has now limited me to making future changes. So i also wish i went for the external. the one benefit to the pie kit and internal controller is it can be set up really neatly. I have all the wires bunched together going across the top bar , so apart from the pie motor itself the bike still looks neat and discrete as it did before the conversion.
Neil, if you reply to this thread for more info i will try and put up some photos next week and also give you some first impressions of the pie.
Andrew
P.S Hi my names Andrew i'm in the UK, I'm new to the forum