So many sheeple... I feel sorry for them. The comments on IGG are getting interesting, though.
Roger J
28 minutes ago
WTF! More money required to now ship the extra battery? International shipping for a start was a con, every bike was ex China to the country of destination then ground distribution (UPS) from there. So unless you live in China it was always “International” so why is the delivery to the US $194 and everywhere else $247? And now you want an extra $50 – Crap even if there are multiple packages i.e. 2/2 in a delivery, UPS treat it as a single delivery! Just label the battery with the same address.
Roger's points are what got me banned from the FB Owner's Group when I posted them there, months ago.
I knew this was coming back in May. When I was exchanging emails with GoSondors about a refund, I was told they planned on charging extra for the batteries due to "new regulations". I replied stating that their "new" regulations took effect September 2014, and that there's nothing in those regulations to force them to charge their customers extra shipping fees. I sent them this link:
http://www.regulations.gov/#!documentDetail;D=PHMSA-2009-0095-0302
Guess what? I never heard from them again. Surprise, surprise.
This is just another cash grab/con job. They're treating customers who already paid the agreed-upon amounts, like their personal bank machines. They're using pressure tactics ($50 or no battery for you) and lies (we're forced to charge this fee due to "shipping regulations") to eke more cash out of paid customers. It's looking more and more like Ivars has cleaned them out, or they've mismanaged the funds handed to them by customers, and they're scrambling to scrape together the cash to get at least a few ebikes out to (US - they can't afford international) customers before the authorities come after them. Five million dollars -> gone in a few months, with very little to show for it.
Either way, expect more sleazy fees and cash grabs as they get more desperate. Next will be another "extra fee" added for international buyers, "pay up or no ebike for you". They'll blame customs and any government department they can think of for the charge. What they should really be doing, if they can't afford the UPS for international shipping, is to just give the international customers refunds and focus on the US customers.
One thing that's going for them (saving grace?) is that they're willing to offer battery refunds to those who don't want to pay the extra $50. I guess they're hoping customers will read the online accounts of this ebike's range, which is considerably less than first advertised. People will have to weigh the $50 fee vs. the likelihood this project will be bankrupt before they can get the batteries shipped out. As an "international" buyer who is unlikely to ever see an ebike, much less a battery, I'll be hedging my bets and requesting the refund.