Waynemarlow
E*POWAH Master
Is the light weight Emtb market very ripe for the right product. Take myself for example, I have an Analogue bike and a Dengfu E10. The Analogue doesn't really get ridden much now as I'm getting to the age where fitness and body recovery is taking to long between rides to fully recover. And I have a real problem with the E10/ M600, it is too powerful to ride with my friends still on analogue bikes, too heavy to lift over styles and gates and I wasn't keeping my fitness using it. But it is great fun in a pack of other full fat Emtbs.
The Ezesty, Orbea Rise and Specialized SL's all fill that very light weight and great fun to ride bikes on typically trail and some downhill. The Ezesty also has the ability to simply remove the motor and battery and you have a conventional Mtb thats 13kgs. Having just purchased an Ezesty and new to the EZesty I think it will become the bike I most use. Last night I went out with a fast group on Gravel bikes, not a problem to fit in, Sunday I went with analogue riders, turned the motor off and on a recent trip to Bike Park Wales I was surprised to see so many Rises and SL's, talking to the riders they like the almost MTB feel in the downhills, they just fit another battery at lunch time.
My prediction is that there is about to be an explosion of sales in this market, the full fat EMtb is now fully catered for and a lot of bikes sold, the very light weight EMtb pushes $10K so the sales are few. Get that price right and some tweaks to the way we think ( think Mtb with a cheat factor rather than Emtb ) and my betting is that it will quickly become a whole new market.
The major problem to date has been the limited range of only 250Wh's ( I used only 1 Battery on the 3 hour Gravel ride and about 2 hours, 20 miles per battery with other Emtbs whilst trail riding ), the Fazua gets around this with easily changeable batteries, the Rise and SL by fitting range extender batteries. Why not simply fit a 400W/h battery such as the new Fazua 60 ?
Am I the only one starting to think these light weights are really the all rounders we thought full fats were ?
The Ezesty, Orbea Rise and Specialized SL's all fill that very light weight and great fun to ride bikes on typically trail and some downhill. The Ezesty also has the ability to simply remove the motor and battery and you have a conventional Mtb thats 13kgs. Having just purchased an Ezesty and new to the EZesty I think it will become the bike I most use. Last night I went out with a fast group on Gravel bikes, not a problem to fit in, Sunday I went with analogue riders, turned the motor off and on a recent trip to Bike Park Wales I was surprised to see so many Rises and SL's, talking to the riders they like the almost MTB feel in the downhills, they just fit another battery at lunch time.
My prediction is that there is about to be an explosion of sales in this market, the full fat EMtb is now fully catered for and a lot of bikes sold, the very light weight EMtb pushes $10K so the sales are few. Get that price right and some tweaks to the way we think ( think Mtb with a cheat factor rather than Emtb ) and my betting is that it will quickly become a whole new market.
The major problem to date has been the limited range of only 250Wh's ( I used only 1 Battery on the 3 hour Gravel ride and about 2 hours, 20 miles per battery with other Emtbs whilst trail riding ), the Fazua gets around this with easily changeable batteries, the Rise and SL by fitting range extender batteries. Why not simply fit a 400W/h battery such as the new Fazua 60 ?
Am I the only one starting to think these light weights are really the all rounders we thought full fats were ?
Last edited: