Dave,
I agree with you on the pricing you have quoted, but shipping costs are only part of the overall cost. Warehousing is substantially lower in Germany than in the UK, and Germany being the centre pretty much of EU trade it would make sense to base the operation there. Furthermore shipping from Germany to the UK is cheaper than the other way round.
On a slightly different note, I am not sure about the 'Made in Germany' label. I thought you needed more than 17% of German made components in order to claim that label, and the reduced range of 3 bikes would still be essentially the same as before. Comments anyone?
Lastly, you have also talked about Chinese crank drives making their debut at the Eurobike show. Can we expect to see any of them in the Kudos range soon? We have been looking at Bofeili bikes recently but cannot understand the fascination for crank drive (unless you have very weak legs and very steep hills....)?
The Bofeili motor was installed in several bikes at the Shanghai show,I visited the Bofeili factory-its a small business,classic family business-dad is the engineer,mum is the accountant and their daughter is translator/marketing. They produce complete e-bikes or sell motors to other assemblers,I think they gave a number of bikes to other booths at the Shanghai show,hence the reason so many booths had almost the same product. I would love to buy the Bofeili equipped bike but so many of my suppliers have rejected the motor citing needs further development and won't put a guarantee on the motor,some indicated alignment problems,at this time I cannot take the risk,which is a shame because the people at Bofeili are very nice to deal with.
I am sure you are aware that some 10 plus chinese hub motor suppliers are working on crank drive,many of them had stands at the Eurobike show,some using the MPF system of Taiwan that seems the most advanced. We are currently testing 2 of them but only one shows promise and it still needs the bugs ironed out-Bosch is a big company and I am sure they went through an extensive testing r&d program to bring their crank drive to its current developed stage,even the AEG system released at Eurobike still needed development and the price structure is similar to Bosch,it does have aftermarket potential not requiring a bespoke frame.
Why the fascination with crank drive-it allows you to ride up hills slower but with optimised power-the only weakness of hub drive is that the motor works best(peak torque)if the bike speed uphill is maintained at minimum 8 mph. If a rider allows the speed to fall to say 4 mph then the motor is straining,its below its optimum speed,the rider goes down in the gears,the bike goes slower and a negative loop is created. With crank drive the motor speed is constant and the power fed through the gears,combined with the rider power allows full power at a slower speed,this is particularly useful for an unfit rider.
Sram released a combined hub motor/gearbox that auto shifted between 2 gear sets so that slow speed riding in the lower gear would be possible and then a higher gear shifted on the flat-the problem is that the power only comes in at 4kmh so no help on hill starts,cannot see the point with that limitation.
We are working on a system,patent under consideration,that should bring the torque reaction of a hub drive at low speed hill climbs up to the power afforded by crank drive,avoiding the cost and complexity.
Not that it bothers me but if you are serious about selling e-bikes to germans you have to offer a crank drive bike,Bosch have done such a good marketing job that anything else is considered low technology. We both know that the current Bafang hub motors have been developed to the point of doing a good job of all but the steepest climbs and 26" wheeled hub drive bikes with some rider input impress most customers,but the germans are technocrats and love all the technology,even if at times it is superfluous.
2013 will be an exciting year for e-bike development.
Dave
Kudoscycles