My perspective: the original campaign was a pretty small one, considering. And then it exploded as more and more people bought in. We're talking less than 30 days. Now comes the request to have 'everything' figured out right now, including every aspect of a business. Except... that's a tall order and might even be beyond the scope of the average crowdfunding product developer/marketer. Sure, maybe Storm & his folk 'should' have figured their campaign would generate millions in the very first batch, but they didn't. I can't fault them for not being psychic. What really pushed this campaign at such a massive rate was the rabid level of excitement generated by those who first bought into the product. THEY grew the business by word-of-mouth, far more than Storm or Agency 2.0 did (IMHO). Maybe Storm is even kicking himself for not charging $999 per bike right out of the gate.
Most start-up companies make it up as they go. I've seen it first-hand back in the dot.com era of Silicon Valley, where I worked at the time. Someone had an idea and they were not a business person. Common story.
The point? Storm, whether he intended to build a business or not, now has to figure out lots of complicated things since his little venture suddenly exploded into a very big deal. Whether he intends to keep some kind of business concern going or just do this one campaign and then get out, he is suddenly in a spot he couldn't have foreseen without being prescient.
Realistically it will probably take more than 30 days to figure everything out. Though yes, the specs of the bike itself should be nailed down, and within 30 days Storm should know what the Chinese factories can deliver, at what cost per bike, and they should be able to estimate how long it would take to deliver 7,000 bikes to all the funders (I suspect until 4Q until the very last one gets delivered, but maybe it will only be 5 or 6 months). And they should also know or at least be close to knowing what shipping costs will look like.
Storms' campaign shouldn't stop anyone else from pursuing their own eBike venture or dream. Anyone with enough desire can do the same thing -- find a way to have about 200 to 300 eBikes built or find an existing bike and have it converted into an eBike and offer those at some % markup. And they can figure out all the business issues up front and not get caught in the same situation as this campaign.