Bruce Arnold
Well-Known Member
There's been some discussion here about whether or not batteries are a major bottleneck, making it difficult for Juiced Bikes to get their products out the door, as @Tora Harris has said. There are some who scoff at this notion. I haven't chimed in on that one, because I just don't know enough.
I saw a video on YouTube just now that gave me some insight. The channel is called "Fully Charged Show." Not associated with the ebike shop in London named Fully Charged, although they have made a couple of videos with the shop's owner (as has Court.) They cover sustainable energy in general and electric vehicles in particular.
Their most recent video was a summary of news about various EVs, such as a ferry in Norway and a new fully-electric Winnebago RV. Two parts caught my attention, as relevant to our discussion.
First, Hyundai has had to slow production of the Ioniq because they can't get batteries fast enough. Second, VW has committed $48 billion to purchasing batteries for a major roll-out of EVs that they don't plan to start building for another year.
This suggests that Tora's remarks about batteries are not just cheap excuses, as some have claimed. Ebikes in general are a tiny share of the worldwide hunger for batteries. If those gigantic manufacturers are in this situation - if Hyundai can't build cars fast enough and VW finds it necessary to plan that far ahead - how can ebike builders not have similar problems?
There's a video I'd like to see @Court do. Ebike journalism on the battery supply issue. Are Trek, Specialized, etc. having similar setbacks? What does the future look like? Are battery suppliers ramping up production?
I saw a video on YouTube just now that gave me some insight. The channel is called "Fully Charged Show." Not associated with the ebike shop in London named Fully Charged, although they have made a couple of videos with the shop's owner (as has Court.) They cover sustainable energy in general and electric vehicles in particular.
Their most recent video was a summary of news about various EVs, such as a ferry in Norway and a new fully-electric Winnebago RV. Two parts caught my attention, as relevant to our discussion.
First, Hyundai has had to slow production of the Ioniq because they can't get batteries fast enough. Second, VW has committed $48 billion to purchasing batteries for a major roll-out of EVs that they don't plan to start building for another year.
This suggests that Tora's remarks about batteries are not just cheap excuses, as some have claimed. Ebikes in general are a tiny share of the worldwide hunger for batteries. If those gigantic manufacturers are in this situation - if Hyundai can't build cars fast enough and VW finds it necessary to plan that far ahead - how can ebike builders not have similar problems?
There's a video I'd like to see @Court do. Ebike journalism on the battery supply issue. Are Trek, Specialized, etc. having similar setbacks? What does the future look like? Are battery suppliers ramping up production?