The trouble with any advertising on the G-tech bike is it is not backed up by any independent reviews or impartial feedback. Fingers....you should take up marketing as a profession,your last posting uses words straight out of the DTP guidebook.
I did a Google search and all roads seem to lead back to the Pedelecs forum,it seems you guys are the only ones who bought one. There is a review from a lady from the Daily Mail but she has lifted all her article from G-techs publicity blurb,the 'it does 30 miles so I get 2.5 x 12mile journeys before I need to recharge'....yeh!!!!
Does it say anywhere the Lithium type that the battery uses?
The rule of thumb that we all use is average rider input,average terrain .....3 miles per Ah,that would give 15 miles max out of a 5Ah battery,but with no gears to help up the hills my guess is 12 miles max,if you use max PAS in a hilly area,then 8 miles.
I see it uses Lithium-Ion,I suspect Samsung 18650 cells,to get 30 miles reliably you need minimum 10Ah battery and that will be on the limit, My e-bike uses the same cell type,8Ah battery with careful power usage and optimum gear usage,24 miles max....normally I am getting very low on juice at 20 miles.
Soon we intend to hire the Redbridge bike circuit for some testing of new models Perhaps you could organise a G-tech bike to come along and show the claimed 30 miles,that circuit with its bends,steep and shallow hills is a pretty faithful representation of e-bike usage,the venue is well known to Pedelec forum members.
This is important because a lot of Pedelec users cannot get up hills without the power,even a 15 kg bike gets very heavy when pushing it up a steep hill.
At this time the Woosh Karoo with its bigger battery and gears would seem to be a more useful all round bike.
KudosDave