Thriving businesses like Lunacycles, RadPower, M2S, FLX etc have made it difficult for established companies to operate the same way they did.
People are often enticed by low upfront cost (very few take into account the overall cost of maintenance, repair, warranty) and they jump onto these brands. Most people also end up using the bike for recreational purposes, very few people are hardcore commuters putting in 1000's of miles, so as a result, cost band of $1.5K to $2K is where the lions share is.
In a situation like this, it's hard for a small company like Juiced to support the wide dealer network and provide them margins.
I think Tora is trying to make everything modular on the bike so when there is a situation, the part can be replaced easily without needing an expert mechanic.
He is also someone who is trying to provide exceptional value to his customers rather than just rebranding some chinese bike and selling it with % profit.
@Bruce Arnold point of up and coming businesses having issues with logistics, support is very valid. I really hope
@Tora Harris can bring on-board few more people for customer support and streamline the demand-supply chain.