George S.
Well-Known Member
It's clear that the Sondo-Storm was a campaign, not an ebike. A2.0 says it has received almost $200,000, laying claim to well over a half million. That's an expensive marketing campaign. Arguably, it was successful. If you take the Agency money out, the processing fees, and the IGG fees, what can Storm put into each bike?
There's no reason CF cannot be a place to raise money for a real bike. I think Hong at Karmic is trying to make a real bike, even a better bike. CF has become a race to the bottom, where low price is everything. The low margin end of things is usually difficult. Better to sell a bike, not a bargain?
(Link Removed - No Longer Exists)
We are talking some serious design work here, and I'm especially impressed that these guys might change the way ebike batteries work. They also are looking at a direct offering through Kickstarter, which does allow them to get the funding. If they offer a well designed bike for $1500, or the kit for $750, it might be more along the lines of a bike shop bike, but at a lower margin. The whole CF thing needs to be a way to make real bikes, to push the tech. Lenny (@Crazy Lenny Ebikes) said $1500 is the sweet spot. There's a lot of logic to that, just because you leave room for a better bike and bits of innovation. Ideally the line between CF and dealer could blur, but that would require dealers to lower margins and aim for volume.
There's no reason CF cannot be a place to raise money for a real bike. I think Hong at Karmic is trying to make a real bike, even a better bike. CF has become a race to the bottom, where low price is everything. The low margin end of things is usually difficult. Better to sell a bike, not a bargain?
(Link Removed - No Longer Exists)
We are talking some serious design work here, and I'm especially impressed that these guys might change the way ebike batteries work. They also are looking at a direct offering through Kickstarter, which does allow them to get the funding. If they offer a well designed bike for $1500, or the kit for $750, it might be more along the lines of a bike shop bike, but at a lower margin. The whole CF thing needs to be a way to make real bikes, to push the tech. Lenny (@Crazy Lenny Ebikes) said $1500 is the sweet spot. There's a lot of logic to that, just because you leave room for a better bike and bits of innovation. Ideally the line between CF and dealer could blur, but that would require dealers to lower margins and aim for volume.