The ergonomics sold me on an Agattu and I bought a used one with a newly fitted Impulse 2 motor. 1800 miles later the motor's toast but the battery is still good at 9 years of age, the overbuilt frame barely notices 35kg luggage and it's been a great intro to riding MTB trails. There's a fine bike struggling to emerge here and if I could rewind I'd get the pedal-only Agattu and a torquey motor.
Completely agree. I was one of the two original reviewers of the assisted Agattu when it was introduced here in late 2007 and reviewed it very favourably, particularly praising many of the bike's aspects. That was when it had the very reliable Panasonic motor and numerous sales resulted from the reviews.
Their switch to the Daum motor, branded Impulse, was initially ok but for a software peculiarity that meant they started with full power which after a few seconds reduced. Customers didn't like that and complained so an update was introduced to maintain the power. That was the beginning of the troubles, making it clear its design strength was inadequate in some respects.
Then with competition from Bosch with more power, Kalkhoff-Daum entered into a power race with Bosch by introducing the Impulse 2. The result was that almost every motor failed and Daum had no answers, eventually introducing a revised model called Evo, but that was also failing. A rolling two year warranty maintained some sales for a while, but eventually prospective customers gave up buying. The Kalkhoff importer here failed and went out of business later, swamped by the strain of dealing with huge numbers of dissatisfied customers.
Referencing USAe-bike's post , it is not a grease problem. We've had a whole decade's experience with the Impulse motors amd it's clear their mechanical design was inadequate for the increases in power applied later. The pawls don't shatter from a grease problem for example, they break up because they are simply not strong enough.
As the old saying goes, "One swallow doth not a Summer make", so the odd incidence of someone having a reliable Impulse short term does not in any way offset the countless hundreds which have failed within 2000 miles.
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