Lee,
I just want to help clarify a point for you that I think got misinterpreted.
If you buy a Juiced bike for 3k, in a year, that bike would be $1000-1500. Yes, it would be worth 1/3rd to 1/2 half of the original purchase price.
If you buy a Reise Mueller for 8k, in a year that bike would be ~6k.
Bikes are interesting and very simple beasts. The cost is in the components. In the non-ebike world you spend a lot of money for making the bike lighter. People will spend thousands to save a few pounds. The Ebike world is sort of like that, but you also pay for range and speed.
I don't know if you have tried the Yamaha anywhere, but if you can, do it. Then try some others around town. https://www.aventon.com/ is not that far from you. Once you do that, and if you have time, and if your wallet would even allow it, go see Chris at Propel in Long Beach. Try the Reise and Mueller. Compare it to the Aventon, the Yamaha and you will then realize the difference between the bikes in the build and quality issue. At that point, you will have an understanding of why people spend a lot of cash on some of these bikes.
Now to mess with your head:
9,000 miles a year. Average 18mph (guessing) is 500 hours on that bike per year. A $3,500 bike is costing you $7 an hour to ride. A $7,000 is $14 an hour. This does not include operating costs (charging) and maintenance. And at 9k miles, you will have some serious maintenance. You will go through chains and brakes, especially if you take that Topanga route. Remember, cars in San Fran go through brakes a lot quicker than those in Kansas So that $3,500 bike could have 6 chains at $50 plus your time to replace. Yes, 1500 miles on the chain and that is because of that ride. The brakes could be ~30 per replacement and again, 1500 miles before you should replace. That is another ~$200 in costs. This does not include your time in repairs and costs to keep the chain oiled.
This is why people are suggesting higher-end bikes that have gates belt drives.
I just want to help clarify a point for you that I think got misinterpreted.
If you buy a Juiced bike for 3k, in a year, that bike would be $1000-1500. Yes, it would be worth 1/3rd to 1/2 half of the original purchase price.
If you buy a Reise Mueller for 8k, in a year that bike would be ~6k.
Bikes are interesting and very simple beasts. The cost is in the components. In the non-ebike world you spend a lot of money for making the bike lighter. People will spend thousands to save a few pounds. The Ebike world is sort of like that, but you also pay for range and speed.
I don't know if you have tried the Yamaha anywhere, but if you can, do it. Then try some others around town. https://www.aventon.com/ is not that far from you. Once you do that, and if you have time, and if your wallet would even allow it, go see Chris at Propel in Long Beach. Try the Reise and Mueller. Compare it to the Aventon, the Yamaha and you will then realize the difference between the bikes in the build and quality issue. At that point, you will have an understanding of why people spend a lot of cash on some of these bikes.
Now to mess with your head:
9,000 miles a year. Average 18mph (guessing) is 500 hours on that bike per year. A $3,500 bike is costing you $7 an hour to ride. A $7,000 is $14 an hour. This does not include operating costs (charging) and maintenance. And at 9k miles, you will have some serious maintenance. You will go through chains and brakes, especially if you take that Topanga route. Remember, cars in San Fran go through brakes a lot quicker than those in Kansas So that $3,500 bike could have 6 chains at $50 plus your time to replace. Yes, 1500 miles on the chain and that is because of that ride. The brakes could be ~30 per replacement and again, 1500 miles before you should replace. That is another ~$200 in costs. This does not include your time in repairs and costs to keep the chain oiled.
This is why people are suggesting higher-end bikes that have gates belt drives.