What made you go with that model?
What price point were you able to obtain it for?
I am value conscious not strictly price conscious. I know there are less expensive e-bikes, but I wanted a compromise between quality, simplicity, durability, and price. The price I found was $1999 with a 10% discount, no taxes, free delivery, final cost is $1799.10
Buying with a credit card that doubles warranty.
I used to commute with a non-electric bike, I had a hiatus from this due to my now almost 4 year old son. I also have a weehoo "turbo" trailer that my son is gleeful to ride on. I have ridden many thousands of miles on traditional bicycles, and motorcycles, so handling gear changes and managing my chain torque both subconsciously and proactively is not a concern to me (would have *liked* shift detection, but decided I didn't need it). I have taken my son on bike rides lately (non-e bike) and found that I don't *love* being sweaty and grinding out big hills like I used to. I'm 47 years old now and have an artificial joint in my foot and torn menisci in both knees. But I still love the breeze, and I need some exercise. My off-road days are past, I used to ride a Yamaha WR250R dirtbike, broke my knee. I might get on crushed stone paths and maybe a little gravel, but if you wouldn't drive a sedan over the surface, I probably wouldn't be excited to ride a bike over it either.
I tried my wife's throttle controlled hub motor bike. Love the assist, but don't like managing a throttle on a bicycle, and don't think I would have the self-discipline to get exercise while using it. So, want peddle assist (PAS). Due to trailer mounted at seat post, a top mount battery pack wouldn't work. Also think the idea of a Mid-Drive that pulls through the gear reductions could help when towing a trailer up a hill. Due to commuting, I like integrated fenders, pannier rack, front and rear lights.
A lot of the bike trails in my area may get strict about speed-pedelec at any time, and don't feel the need for super fast. I had a speedo on some of my bicycles in years past, and think cruising in the 12-15MPH is plenty fast enough. Didn't like what I had heard about the Bosch "wall" at 20 MPH (for when I do want to pedal madly). Saw a video review of a bike shop owner who chose a GIant Quick-E+ as his personal bike because he had tried the different options and chose the Yamaha based on his preference the "feel". I test rode a Trek Bosch and thought it was a bit noisy, saw videos demonstrating that Yamaha was a little quieter. I like the simplicity of the Yamaha control panel. Was momentarily geek-entranced by the thought of the COBI, but the more I thought about it, the more I realized that the bike and the phone don't need to have any integration. A control system that is simple and dedicated is likely to be easier and more reliable, I can always put a cell phone mount on the handlebars if I really want to see GPS, or control music/podcasts to bluetooth headset.
I'm a big guy, 250 lbs and just over 6' tall. The fact that this SDURO frame is also used in trail-bike applications hints that it will likely handle a little rough treatment. My old bike had 700c by 32 tires, I felt like I was SQUISHING them and risking a pinch flat. This new bike has 700c by 40, so they are a bit wider. If I do find myself in a really bumpy situation, I can unlock the front suspension and do old-man low-quality bunny hops of the rear tire over bigger bumps.
I don't know if I will like the front suspension, but it does have a lockout for when I might not like it. I have owned Yamaha motorcycles, and like the idea of a vehicle drive train developed by them, I figure they have a lot of engineering experience when it comes to small two-wheeled vehicles. (millions of motorbikes on the road...) I wanted a quality bike because little mechanical things bother me (I'm just like that).
The Haibike SDURO seems to be a good value at the price I found when compared to other bikes at the same level of build/component quality.