pagheca
Member
I really hope it will last longer... but I may need to sell it if I relocate somewhere else in the future. It's not easy to take an ebike out of a remote island, that is another major issue for the minority of people living there.
I sold my 2012 peugeot last week got £900 it had a new MOT with a few advisories which I thought was ok. 99800 miles on clock 5 hours later it was up for sale £3499.I don't expect to get more from my Ebikes than from my laptop after 5-10 years.
Yes shipping anything with a big battery is a bit of a problem and if done legally is costly. In UK anyway.I really hope it will last longer... but I may need to sell it if I relocate somewhere else in the future. It's not easy to take an ebike out of a remote island, that is another major issue for the minority of people living there.
Looks like you confuse getting-price with asking-price, confuse fast devaluating consumer goods with cars, or just did a bad deal.I sold my 2012 peugeot last week got £900 it had a new MOT with a few advisories which I thought was ok. 99800 miles on clock 5 hours later it was up for sale £3499.
I considered that, thanks, but it would cost, also because we are out of the EU common market area with lower VAT, and there are additional customs to be pay when you reenter something.That problem narrows down to shipping the battery you just removed.
I've only ever traded cars in and taken out one from same garage. Trade in price was 1200 from a few garages 600 from we buy any car so I was happy enough. I didn't fancy driving 500 miles where I was getting the new car from. Had it 12 years so did its job getting a bit clunky. Anyway that was last week .Looks like you confuse getting-price with asking-price, confuse fast devaluating consumer goods with cars, or just did a bad deal.
YesWould you say this is a deal
YesLovely bike gaining a great reputation
Me too.Very tempted
Would this lose much more value
View attachment 144775
Well sounds like someone's tempted aswellYes
Yes
Me too.
Also yes.
I’m with you - and agree that it’s a totally reasonable and rational strategy to plan to roll your bikes every year or two if that makes you happy. It’s not like you’re trying to get rich doing it. Anyway, it was a rational strategy at one time. Not right now though.I made this to discuss how much ebikes are devaluing and so far everyones like "i buy my emtb to ride it" thats great...we all do that. However spending top dollar on something that is worth quarter the price in one year is disheartening!
And this is the reason that buying a second hand eBike doesn't work for me. We are seeing big steps in performance of the latest bikes, particularly the full power lightweight category. Hurry up and release the Amflow DJI- pace of innovation. Why ride a 18kg Specilized sl with 35nm/320wh when I can ride a 20kg dji with 120nm/600wh?
Nice oneI can beat that MONDRAKER CRAFTY RR | Tekmotiv
It is in stockNice one
But I wise they would tell you it's in stock without having to make phone call before hitting the buy button
I don’t expect to get anything from a laptop after 5-10 years. I don’t think 5-10 years is what the OP is talking about.I don't expect to get more from my Ebikes than from my laptop after 5-10 years.
Well sounds like someone's tempted aswell
An associate i know who has his own business jumped on the EV bandwagon he was telling us down the local pub t other day he owes porsche for the Taycan he has sat on his drive if he wants to get rid of it.EVs are also going crazy because of the battery price dump.
The VW ID Buzz came out 2 years ago for about 60k, with most dealers only selling 70k+ variants. Now that the market is flooded with EVs, I see second hand ones with barely any mileage going for 40k. VW even updated their pricing at 52k new, which is much lower than what a lot of people are trying to sell theirs for second hand, good luck with that...
Basically electronics have always been a bad financial investment, and that's all ebikes and EVs are viewed as now...
Similar story on a guy iknow with a lease/pcp car , dont think the BIK tax he saved covers what he owes , poor sodThe used EV car world is taking a dump. I was in the Porsche dealer last week picking up some parts, they have a new Taycan Turbo on the showroom floor for £35k off. I chatted with the salesman for a few, he’s a “tell it like it is” type of guy. He said the used prices of the Taycan have dropped so much that they can’t sell new ones, nobody wants to take the £40-50k hit as soon as it leaves the showroom.
I have a similar approach (see message #24 in this thread), because I've never been very good at selling/buying/geotizing, so I agree with you: buy wise, buy little, use as much as you can.Call me old fashioned ( the old part would be correct anyway!) but my method is buy new, buy once, buy the best, and look after what you have. I have a VW T5 bought new, now 18 years old. Serviced every year, the only issue in all that time was a broken drive shaft. I have a BMW 5 Series, bought new, now 10 years old. Zero issues just regular service costs, still looks and drives like new. I have 2 Whyte EMTBs both bought new, I do all the servicing, neither has suffered any issues or cost anything other than the usual, tyres, brake pads, chains and Cassette...apart from a cutting out issue on the 2 year old bike when brand new.........I diagnosed and fixed that issue myself within a week at a cost of £85. Zero issues since then.
I have no intention of selling any of the above simply because they all "do what it says on the tin" . Absolutely no chance I would change either the Van or BMW for an EV!! or either Whyte bike for any other brand.
My other bike which is a supercaliber needs a new rear derailleur , the AXS one is 600 quid plus .......if it had been a cheaper bike when i bought it it would be in the canal lolI think we're just reverting to a more normal level of depreciation after covid supply/demand issues.
There's a huge amount of maintenance costs with MTB's imo. Bikes are usually worth a lot less than people think, especially if they need full bearing change, fork, shock service, with ebikes you've got potential motor issues and batteries with less capacity. Most second hand stuff is still way overpriced and hence not selling.
Crafty RR bikes do have a 750 battery
You can drive your ev and try every single think to save this planet , problem is its a ticking timebomb waiting for whichever other despot is ready to push a button , i doubt very much that the amount of things we have all done this year to mitigate climates will be a drop in the pool in comparison to how much has been blown up and burnedI have a similar approach (see message #24 in this thread), because I've never been very good at selling/buying/geotizing, so I agree with you: buy wise, buy little, use as much as you can.
The only thing, with all due respect, I don't really understand what's so funny is about converting to an EV. One of the reasons I bought an electric bike is that the roads here are incredibly steep and the elevation gains to overcome are significant even to get to work (7 minutes one way, double that on the way back, with the ebike in turbo!) but I wanted to minimize my fuel consumption.
I am an astronomer but I have been working on climate science for a long period of my life and have known for a long time that if it is true that we are emptying an ocean with a teaspoon, we are rapidly moving toward the ultimate catastrophy. And ebikes are one of the most efficient and intelligent solutions right now to reduce our transportation carbon footprint in cases like mine..
Any action that delays the catastrophe, especially for the next generation (e.g. OUR children and grandchildren), is better than nothing, and maybe a solution is found in the meantime.
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