Interesting post Bigg1es. I would just point out that to a thief, the design wouldn't make a huge amount of difference. All they see is a wad of bank notes and it it's sellable they'll steal it. They won't research how popular it is or how easy or not it is to sell before taking it. Bear in mind if they get £50 for it, it's £50 profit so they're not too fussy.
Anyway for what it's worth the missus saw a Peugeot EC03-200 for £999 at a shop in the next town. Not quite brand new but the previous owner was apparently an elderly lady that only used it half a dozen times but couldn't get on with it, so but for a very slight bit of wear on the tyres you wouldn't know.
She liked it so we bought it. I know nothing about bikes, electric or other wise but it looks very solid and seems to be well built and well specced:
- Gears: Shimano Altus 7 + derailleur system
- Brakes: Shimano Front and Rear V brakes
- Seatpost: Alloy suspension 31.6
- Cockpit: Alloy handlebars and adjustable stem
- Range: 400W/75km *(that's for the 11Ah battery)
- Shifters: Shimano Altus7 shifters
- Control System: E-Going LED
- Lights: Axa Pico LED lighting system
A set of panniers now hides the battery, and the lights are great too, being built in and powered by the battery. We're told they will last for up to 4 hours after the power runs out for the motor. The back light is built into the back of the battery holder and is the biggest I've seen on any bike, and larger than on some motorcycles.
The motor is in the front wheel, which seems to differ from every other bike I've seen and the battery is under the luggage thing at the back. Best thing is this one has a 15Ah, 36v battery which we're told is good for around 80 miles. We have only charged it once and so far she has done, in my estimation, around 25 miles and the power indicator on the handlebars still reads 3 (out of 4), and on the actual battery still reads 5 out of 5.
That's interesting because the Peugeot site has the latest version, the EC01-200, which has an 11Ah battery and they claim to get up to 75 miles out of that. The two bikes look very similar but there are no gears on the latest one (I think they have been replaced by a variable mid-mounted motor), but the new one retails at £2000 so this one looks like an extremely good buy. I'm not keen on the dull grey colour but the main thing is she is happy with it.
Oh, and the dealer included a Kryptonite lock and cable too, don't ask me which model but it retails around the £40 mark.