byunbee
Well-Known Member
This is mainly because FLX is not a bike builder. They are a bike distributor that ships to the customers in the same box that they receive from China factories. The bikes are built in two configurations at the factory, packed, and shipped. There is no QA once it arrives at their U.S. warehouse. It just gets inventoried and shipped to the customer.I asked about street tires for the Blade 2.0 and was told it was a no-go, they are not customizing beyond what is in the configurator. I'm just planning to buy a set of street tires, along with a few other aftermarket goodies, to swap when the bike finally arrives. Which will be amazing if it happens in August as they claim given the likelihood of COVID driven delays.
WW is a bike builder that designs their own frames working with top manufacturers in Taiwan. Similar to FLX, bikes do get mostly assembled at the factory, but once it arrives at Watt Wagons, each bike is inspected and tested after any custom requests get applied. Only then, do the bikes get shipped in extremely well packaged boxes 100% assembled including front and rear tires/wheels, handlebars, seatposts, etc.
There was even a funny thread around the quality of their packaging to avoid damage during shipment, that it can be used as a bed afterwards.
Also, one the the best things about the UC Pro that convinced many of us to purchase this bike are the “toys” that the bike comes with as default. Some of these include Spurcycle Bell, Cirrus Cycle Kinekt suspension seatpost, Surly Moloko loop bar, Brooks B-17 Imperial Saddle. Better configured model comes with SuperNova M99 Pro front and rear lights. Even the base configuration Lezyne Macro light is still a very capable light at 1000 lumens which beats most lights that are available from majority of the bike manufacturers including Giant, Trek, Haibike, and FLX. All of the items mentioned are pretty much best of the best in their class which you can validate for yourself in terms of cost and the quality.
Many bike consumers on this forum end up spending a lot of money afterwards to upgrade the cheap components that come with the bike. With the UC Pro, there really isn’t a need to, unless you want to “downgrade”.
Lastly, you can’t forget the Bafang Ultra with the Archon X1 controller and the option to have dual battery setup for longer range, which the FLX Blade doesn’t offer.