If no Brexit deal, which looks likely, will this mean the end of bosch bikes and batteries in uk, or very limited stock, as prices may be out of reach for most of us , or just not willing to pay silly prices.
If no Brexit deal, which looks likely, will this mean the end of bosch bikes and batteries in uk, or very limited stock, as prices may be out of reach for most of us , or just not willing to pay silly prices.
Thanks for bringing that up.If no Brexit deal, which looks likely, will this mean the end of bosch bikes and batteries in uk, or very limited stock, as prices may be out of reach for most of us , or just not willing to pay silly prices.
I have been lucky, up to now my batteries have simply "lasted", 4 batteries on 2 bikes. All with Panasonic cells. So I have never had to re-cell one, though I understand exactly how its done.I suppose the only area I'm worried about for e-bikes is buying cells. The cheapest place I've found is NKON.nl, a Dutch site. Hopefully another provider will step in, as they are not from the EU originally.
Sounds like another VERY good reason not to buy a Bosch powered bikeIf no Brexit deal, which looks likely, will this mean the end of bosch bikes and batteries in uk, or very limited stock, as prices may be out of reach for most of us , or just not willing to pay silly prices.
Good news for almost everyone but the poor consumer, as usual.Update: Anti-dumping measures on Chinese and US bikes and e-Bikes
The Department of International Trade has this morning updated the Bicycle Association on anti-dumping measures effective as of January 1st.cyclingindustry.news
There are UK suppliers of cells so as long as their stocks are good then should be no worries. My last cells HG2 worked out a couple quid cheaper then Nkon. Wholesale 18650 or Fogstar are both in the UK.I suppose the only area I'm worried about for e-bikes is buying cells. The cheapest place I've found is NKON.nl, a Dutch site. Hopefully another provider will step in, as they are not from the EU originally.
And companies take advantage of that too in other than prices. Some six years ago I looked at Sony's warranty policies on electricals in the USA and here in the UK. Where their warranties on items were commonly either one or two years here, very often the identical items enjoyed five years in the USA.This country has always been expensive. Witness looking at machine tool in America, you will pay the same numerical amount of pounds (or more) as dollars.
Some 20 years ago i was involved in a charity reroofing project. There was a team og guys coming from Holland to help. It was cheaper for them to hire a twin axle trailer and bring all the materials with them on the ferry, than it was to but the timber here. So much for a level playing field !
There was always good reasons to avoid them, now maybe a few more!!Sounds like another VERY good reason not to buy a Bosch powered bike
I liked your post, well thought out and written, and should be force fed to any prospective Bosch Bike buyer.I think Bosch motors are made in China anyway, it may be they have an assembly plant in Europe for European sales but when sold elsewhere in the world they are exported directly from China. It may have been a US forum or video that showed they are made in China. So it might end up with Bosch motors fully assembled in China being sold in the UK market. It's debatable which would assemble the motors better.
Brose motors are one of the least reliable, they have a habit of destroying themselves and being unrepairable hence why Specialized has had to up the warranty on their ebike motors because the high failure rate was putting customers off their ebikes, I think they now offer a 4 year warranty. Anyway those are made in Germany.
In fairness though mid-drive motors can be very complex often featuring belts and plastic cogs in order to reduce sound output. They also feature smaller motors so the whole assembly can fit in the bottom bracket area. It's much easier to make a reliable hub motor because of their design simplicity and motor size especially direct drive hub motors. No moving parts in direct drive hub motors at all except for the sealed bearings on the axle just like any wheel.
It's likely a Bosch motor wholly assembled in the far east would be cheaper than a motor that has its parts shipped to Europe for final assembly so it could be within 6 months Bosch motors end up cheaper.
However lets face it without EU tariffs ebikes are likely to get much cheaper and Bosch will be even less competitive. Bafang motors are more reliable and have easy access to spares and if anything their technology and engineering is better than Bosch. In fact Bafang claim to manufacture motors for many brands so maybe Bosch production or some key parts are made by Bafang for Bosch anyway.
I worked as a compliance officer at an importer previously and saw quite a few certification test reports where multiple brands including Bosch were importing the same products as us, yes they had a different cosmetic re-skin and some minor components may be different but the critical component list was the same and many brands products were on that one certification test report we were all buying from the same Chinese factory. Yet the Bosch marketing spiel was dotted with references about German engineering etc. The product was clearly fully designed, engineered, tested and manufactured in China but you would never see that on any marketing waffle from any brand.
I've got a Bosch drill that is about 40 years old and still going strong, it was made in their Swedish factory of the time. Yet I've seen reports of Bosch drills failing with their first use in recent years. You shouldn't confuse new Bosch with old Bosch which I think many people do.
Minor correction:-I liked your post, well thought out and written, and should be force fed to any prospective Bosch Bike buyer.
With regard to Bosch drills, the green ones are cheap rubbish, they fail, as you pointed out, sometimes immediately on first usage. The professional, Black range, are quite a bit better, but here at least, far more expensive.
I usually buy Black and Decker, some I have are from the 1950s, and I use them rarely, but they still work, single speed and no clutch, ones my Father bought.
I have a professional B&D, also black, which is really powerful and mains driven, that I bought when replacing wood floors in my house, which were variable in "height". One room had a 12 cm difference! Its a very old house! I was using 120mm wood screws to hold everything level for a great many years (hopefully!) and I wore out two big powerful rechargeable drills, so I bought the B&D mains one, to drive these huge screws.
It still works fine and is usually the one I use for heavy jobs. Two speed, torque clutch, forward & backward, variable speed, and it wasn't as expensive as the green Bosch ones....
I have mentioned it before here, but when the British soldiers came back from WW2, anything that was badly made, no matter where it came from was called Bosch, as a word to describe it, up to the end of the 1950's approximately.... "A load of old Bosch" meant "a load of old rubbish!" then at least!
Andy