I'd agree with you but they are misrepresenting themselves and making it seem like they're "working with multiple manufacturers" to get each part to build a bike that they've "designed and built." When they're mearly rebranding something that already exists in China.
If you click the link, the Wave campaign appears to be re-branding a pre-existing $300 bike from Alibaba. Is that not discussion-worthy to you?
I mean I'm not a business man, but Alibaba has the unit price as low as $300 and you're going to pay around $800 from that Wave campaign not including any of the "upgrades" they're offering.
I just found it disappointing and wanted to discuss. Interesting conversation so far. Good responses.
I'd imagine that my $800 could go toward something better, but I'm new to e-Bikes.
- use a crowdfunded campaign like this one and you have a very real risk of getting nothing, and a best case scenario of getting extremely low quality
- use a better crowdfunded campaign like Rad Rover and you'll pay more, you still have to wait, and you still are not a hundred percent certain of what you're getting
I mean I'm not a business man, but Alibaba has the unit price as low as $300 and you're going to pay around $800 from that Wave campaign not including any of the "upgrades" they're offering.
I just found it disappointing and wanted to discuss. Interesting conversation so far. Good responses.
I'd imagine that my $800 could go toward something better, but I'm new to e-Bikes.
Great response. What makes the Rad Rover "better?"
I'm not necessarily in support of the wave in particular - I did not like how they ended up adding far too many niggling options for their buyers - instead of building a solid bike at a reasonable price, they went as low as possible and you build as you see fit. It might work, but getting every order right seems a logistical nightmare to me.
As far as the alibaba comparison, well, you have to consider the battery being offered - are the specs in the alibaba description? just because it looks the same, doesnt mean at $300 you get a 24v 8ah battery; the wave is something like a 48v 11ah, which is a legitimately well sized battery.
Until you contact the alibaba seller, $300 could be the price without a battery too, you don't know unless you go to the point of asking.
$300 is also probably also the cost before shipping. The lowest price may also be at a volume discount (i.e. lets say a 500 or 1,000 bike minimum).
The alibaba might not sell one offs, until you actually contact them you don't know the exact specs of what you're getting, and you get no more of a guarantee buying direct than you do buying on indiegogo from a 'campaign'.
I know I don't want to deal directly with a manufacturing plant in China on an individual level, would you?! maybe if you are the DIY parts buyer type, but that is a whole different animal (plenty of people at endless sphere do buy direct, but on single parts that is more understandable vs a finished product like a bike).
The positives of the wave bike campaign are mainly the people running it seem to be up front and willing to address questions posed; they had popped into the forum in the first few days of their campaign as well, before it took off (incidentally when there was a yahoo puff piece about it...which I don't necessarily care for either).
I'm just going to link to my post in reply to @stevenast - I can be a little, uh, pointed in my arguments at times, but I mean well! It sums up my thoughts on Radrover as well as the people behind it:
http://electricbikereview.com/commu...end-any-more-than-this.1616/page-3#post-19162
gunning for a five star review on EBR..... installing FREE water bottle braze-on bolts on every Wave Electric Bike!..
sure, its a different bike entirely, but work with me here. it is a made-in-China e-bike and this is the CHEAPEST one on Aliexpress (remember, that's Alibaba but for one-off sales and you actually get a price) and it is $1542.55... PLUS $773.68 SHIPPING to the USA!!!
Excellent post! It just shows, going to your bike shop, riding the bike you're going to buy, knowing what you're going to get and what you're going to pay, at the moment you are completing the transaction, makes a lot of sense.
I think you're missing the point of @bcsteeve 's post here. He is pointing out that the true cost of an alibaba bike, if you are able to order just one, is nowhere near the bottom basement prices they list. I have at times tried to articulate the same, however BCsteeve has direct experience with buying through that site that I have not! The point is, the crowdfunded bikes, while potentially a risk, are aggressively priced and shouldn't be compared to the prices you can find from the lowest vendor listings on alibaba, which people seem to regularly want to do.