Hi Ravi,
The price I paid for the Turbo was really a maximum I would ever consider paying for an e-bike. I estimate paid $1500 more than what I would have paid for a
Stromer Elite equipped the way I wanted.
I sold a bunch of stuff from my basement and old cameras from my photographer past and made good money. The money was there to be spent and I did not need anything else. If I had to reach into family money I would not spend this much.
I would have most likely bought a
Motiv Shadow or maybe a Stromer Elite.
It would have probably been the Shadow with extra battery.
The Stromer I liked very much too but there were just a few details that gave me doubts. The weight of the bike, the user reviews after 1 year of use that I read on German pedelec forum were great although there seemed to be about 20% of bikes that had to replace the motor after about a year of heavy use. Then I went to two dealers in my area and handled the Stromer. I liked it a lot although I really thought that going over 50lbs for a bike was getting to be too much for my liking. I knew that the way I would like my Stromer to look was with the addition of the City Kit and a cargo basket (more weight). I also realized that with my 3 bike carriers on my car I would have an issue to securely fasten the Stromer because its front fender would interfere with the clamping mechanism. I researched the fender's flexibility and adjustability and found that there was very close tolerance on spacing from the tire and little wiggle room to accomodate my bike carrier. I also noted the slight noise of the motor of the Stromer. I also discussed with one of the dealers the first generation of Stromers that had widespread issues with the software not regulating overheating and burning the motors left and right. Stromer 2 release price went beyond what I would pay even if I had the money at my disposal. Also noting the up and coming offerings from Haibike or newer Grace models were more expensive than the Turbo.
The Grace Easy I considered briefly but the lack of availability, lack of local dealer and lack of battery power turned me off. The prices for the newer models seem to equal or even surpass the Turbo price yet their integrated lights aren't engineered as well as Turbo, their components appear slightly below the Turbo and the motor of the Turbo appears to be quieter and my gut feeling gives me more confidence with the Turbo's motor after reading the long term reviews.
Injecting here my thoughts about Bosh - I am by no means a competent critic but to my comprehension and understanding of the Bosh system I currently believe that the asking prices for Bosh powered bikes are too high for what I would like to pay, the noise of the motor is not to my liking for a bike ride, the shape of the battery attached to the bike frame is not very appealing to me for the price that is currently asked and the reviews so far are not entirely confidence inspiring for the price that is currently asked. I think they are on the right track though with freeing the front and rear wheel of electric motor but I also think there is still room for improvement in the actual motor housed in the area of the pedals.
The Turbo looked great from the start, without the fenders - bike rack issue solved. The Turbo was fast right away, had already included integrated lights, had slick tires I wanted, looked more like a road bike which is what appealed to me more. Turbo appeared tight and rigid. The few things that worried me was the squeal of the brakes and the lack of battery power. The doubts were immediately erased when I found out they now included much stronger battery. I did not yet know that the brake squeal was also solved in the new model. The Turbo had a decent warranty backed by local dealers. More importantly on the German and Swiss Turbo forums I read long term use reports from several owners. Only one had to replace the motor after one year. The rest of the owners had zero issues with the bike and put big miles on it every day.
I also read the crowd on endless sphere about the bike. The endless sphere crowd will appeal to me more when I decide to build my own e-bike but as they stand now I am not in tune with their opinions. Majority of the guys there build really what can be described as Electric Motorcycles - too heavy, too powerful, too much emphasis on throttle ... not my cup of tea ... really.
The only justification I for the price of Turbo was to use it for commuting. To substitute my cost for driving a car and to make me healthier in return. I had computed that if I did purchase the Turbo it would pay for itself in 2 years. I had the money. The dealer was very fair and honest and the bike was available in a few weeks. I put a deposit on it knowing that I will still be able to back out if something was amiss during the pickup.
At the pickup I test drove the bike and the brake squeal was gone. The bike rode great without any battery assist. The bike felt right for me. Deal was done.
That is probably the best way I could hurl out of me my reasoning. I'm sure I left some things out but feel free to ask more questions. I will know much better after I get some miles on my bike commute. I'm starting this Friday. Up until now (and tomorrow) we had bad weather and I had crucial committments every evening that required a car. It is still winter here and starting Friday is not really a great idea but I am just itching to give it a go.