I don't agree with you on this one fella, I have a spare battery' with RIB fitted on it, I don't see why you would not buy the cover if you have bought the extra battery? My dealer gave me the spare battery at cost and the RIB cover for £25, the battery is hardly any bigger with the cover fitted, fits in my back protector back pack easy as well. Weights not an issue either, I have done multiple big days out with this set up, no issue what so ever. Each to there own thoughMost bikes that use the Bosch system will take the "bare" Bosch battery. In some cases, the battery is not removable, or you might have to drop the motor to remove it.
If it is removable, it will slide out from the bottom of the downtube, or you will remove an access panel on the underside of the downtube.
In neither of these scenarios, is the battery quite as easy to remove as Trek's design, however the advantage is that all you need to carry is a bare battery, which is way less bulky.
With Trek's RIB design, the bare battery is screwed to two end plates. The top plate has the latch mechanism and the bottom plate has the connector. These two end plates are in turn screwed to the face plate or cover. So you end up with a quite bulky assembly, but this is what you would need to carry in order take full advantage of the convenience of this design.
You could of course just carry a bare battery, but then you have the faff of swapping over the end caps and cover, which is undesirable trail-side.
So in short, in scenarios where you need two batteries, the convenience of the RIB design is actually not very convenient.
Yip full kit was supplied, the dealer was great selling the items cheaper.@Kernow @Gazzaaitken fair call fellas, I was wrong on this one. Were the two end caps included with the RIB cover for £25? Which backpack are you using?
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