I don’t know what the Stealth costs, as produced in China, as offered on Alibaba. Ravi makes it clear that bikes like this are in the pipeline. One way or another we will know what it costs and how well it holds up.
A lot of the arguments about quality were made about BikesDirect. People said they were basically hucksters. Their marketing is annoying, but their bikes have held up. And why not? Almost every frame for every bike is made in Taiwan or China. The frame factory makes them for Diamondback and Trek, or Bikes Direct or whoever.
Brands also manufactured by Kinesis include Diamondback Bicycles, Felt Bicycles, GT Bicycles, Schwinn, Jamis, K2, Raleigh,Trek, Kross and Kona — as well as the brands marketed by the U.S. company Bikesdirect.com: Motobecane USA, Dawes USA, Cycles Mercier, Windsor America.
(Wikipedia at http://en.wikipedia.orgy)
So, it is tough to say that a ‘discount’ Chinese ebike frame won’t hold up. If the frame turns out to be OK on these new models, what’s left? Well, the mid-drive and the electronics and the battery. Bafang has a decent reputation, but they have had quality problems. The problems have been fixed. Really, the controllers have been the problem.
What’s the real difference between the 350 W version of the BBS02 and the 700 watt version? Mostly you get a different controller and a 48V battery that can supply a lot of amps. These combinations are working for people. It doesn’t seem like the 750W version will be a disaster. It doesn’t cost much more. It’s a pretty cheap part. Controllers? Well, they can be replaced, and you are buying a part that is generic or in very wide circulation across multiple manufacturers. If Bob’s Cycle’s goes down, the motor is still a Bafang motor. Bafang is a big outfit.
Battery tech is changing. Everyone is adding capacity. We should all pay what Tesla pays, and the cost of the battery would be insignificant on an ebike. That will happen. You have to look out a year or two.
So, the other parts, beyond the frame and the motor parts? At some point these parts are generic. You can buy them on Amazon. If Bob is gone, I can still get a chain or a fork or a pedal. People upgrade the European bikes.There’s a bike frame offered on Kickstarter. Where do those people get parts? Unless the Chinese use proprietary Chinese parts, any bike is full of interchangeable, readily available parts. Seems to me.
When Alibaba went public in the US, it should have sent a message. This is the future of the world retail market. Look at the value of the company, the success of the offering in the US. It’s sort of like what Amazon was 20 years ago. Maybe Dillenger just sees the future, and tries to act on it. Attack them if they have a shoddy product. Attack them if they have poor customer service or don’t fix real issues. But at least have a little admiration for some young guys trying to run a business
. There’s nothing inherently wrong with the Dillenger business model, that I can see.