If you’re in the market for an e-bike, you might be wondering which brand of motor system to choose—and how much it matters. To answer that question, you need to consider what role your new e-bike will play in your life.
If you’re buying an e-bike “just for fun”—perhaps to tool around on when the mood strikes and discard once the novelty’s gone—motor system quality and longevity might not be at the top of your priority list.
But if you hope your e-bike will serve as a long-term mobility tool or car replacement, you need to think like a vehicle buyer from the very beginning—or risk ending up with a bike that’s more like a toy than a tool.
Based on what we’ve seen (and when it comes to making bikes, we’ve seen a lot), Bosch is the one big player that approaches e-bike motor systems with the level of care and long-term planning you’d expect from a company that makes parts for honest-to-goodness vehicles.
This article will explore five often-overlooked advantages of buying an e-bike with a Bosch motor system.
1. Bosch motor systems are built to automotive standards to help you ditch the car more often
With the right e-bike, you can achieve (and even surpass) the mobility of a car—without any of the drawbacks of cars. Buying the right e-bike gets you a tremendous amount of freedom and utility, which is why you should think of e-bike shopping as vehicle shopping.
Bosch has been supplying the world with automotive parts for over 100 years, so they know a thing or two about vehicles. When they moved into the e-bike business in the late 2000s, they brought their lengthy automotive experience and exacting quality standards to the e-bike world.
Bosch puts a ton of emphasis on reliability, which is exactly what you need when you use your e-bike to get to work or carry your family. Their quality control measures and testing protocols have been honed by decades of experience, which means major problems and part failures (analogous to your car’s engine or computer system failing) are incredibly rare.
Bosch walks the talk by pursuing and obtaining appropriate international certifications for their e-bike motor systems and batteries. For example, Bosch was the first e-bike brand to ensure that all of its batteries, motor systems, and chargers are compliant with UL 2849, a rigorous international e-bike safety standard.
When you buy a car, you go with a name brand you trust because you need to use the car more or less hassle-free for a decade or more. That’s what Bosch is offering e-bike buyers by applying auto industry standards to their e-bike motor systems.
2. The Bosch-certified service network provides reliable expert service wherever you go
Bosch has drawn on its automotive experience to create and maintain a vast network of well-trained e-bike dealers and service centers. Buying a Bosch e-bike from your local Bosch-certified dealer lets you access this network of expertise for your bike's entire lifespan.
Bosch began learning how to build a vehicle service network in the 1920s. Back then, cars were the hot new thing, and most of the people buying them had no idea how to fix them (just like many of today’s e-bike buyers!). So, Bosch invested in training workers at automobile workshops far and wide to work with and sell Bosch parts.
A century later, Bosch uses this same model to train a comprehensive network of certified Bosch e-bike dealers and service centers. With more than 100 years of experience in delivering dealer training, Bosch has gotten very good at ensuring that all their e-bike dealers have up-to-date knowledge and skills.
When you buy an e-bike from your local Bosch-certified dealer, you'll never have to hunt for help with your bike's motor system—your dealer will have everything covered. And if you do happen to move to another city or require assistance while traveling with your e-bike, the Bosch network's excellent coverage makes it easy to find help.
3. You’ll save money over the long run on maintenance and repairs
There’s no getting around the fact that a new Bosch e-bike will have a higher initial cost than a bike with a low-end or no-name motor system. But when you make the shift to thinking of your e-bike as a vehicle, you’ll see that you have to consider the long-term cost of ownership—just as you would when buying a car.
If you shop for your e-bike based solely on price, you’re opening yourself up to a cascade of unplanned costs down the line (assuming you want to keep the bike operational). Finding a shop that’s willing to service a no-name e-bike can be tough. E-bike mechanics (like car mechanics) prefer working with quality parts that they know and trust. Time spent searching for help costs money, as do repairs that aren’t covered by warranty.
If you needed to buy a car and a brand-new, low-priced car brand with no track record popped onto your radar, you’d probably pause and think about service issues and long-term costs. Maybe you’d even call up your trusted mechanic and ask if they could or would work on the car in question (and you’d probably get a big nope in response). If you plan to use your e-bike as a complete or partial car replacement, the same rules apply.
4. You can’t brick a Bosch bike (at least not any time soon!)
To brick a smartphone is to render a several-hundred-dollar computing device completely useless, except maybe as a paperweight (it’s about as useful as a brick).
A bricked phone is pretty sad because it represents an enormous waste of money and resources, plus it contributes to electronic waste (it’ll be taking up space in a landfill for a long, long time). But if there’s one thing sadder than a bricked phone, it’s a bricked e-bike, and it happens way more often than it should.
Unfortunately, not all e-bike motor and battery manufacturers have long-term sustainability or repair and replacement plans. A no-name e-bike motor brand could go out of business tomorrow. A factory that makes low-end batteries could decide to stop producing them on a whim.
When your battery life eventually runs out or a critical part breaks, you may have to scramble or wait a long time for a replacement. In the worst-case scenario, you could be unable to obtain a replacement battery or other part, turning your e-bike into a very pricy paperweight.
Bosch knows that e-bikes aren’t like smartphones that you trade in every few years for the newest model. They’re more like cars, in that you buy one assuming it will be possible and cost-efficient to use it for at least a decade.
That’s why Bosch offers a spare parts guarantee for e-bike motor systems, just as they do with automotive components. Should Bosch discontinue the motor system you own, you’ll still be able to get spare parts up to six years after the product’s end-of-life. That way, you can keep riding as long as the rest of the bike is sound.
5. Detailed diagnostic reports help you get the most from your new e-bike
A good e-bike motor system is a pretty technologically sophisticated thing. The best will provide you with detailed diagnostics to help you get the most from your bike, and Bosch is no exception.
Any certified Bosch dealer or service center can run diagnostics on your Bosch e-bike to help you understand how the system is functioning. These reports are packed full of potentially useful information, from which assist mode you use most often to the temperature range of your battery.
Of particular interest to used e-bike buyers (and sellers) is the section that tells you about the status of the bike’s battery, including how much battery life remains. The battery life is one of the biggest factors determining whether a used e-bike is worth buying, so Bosch diagnostic reports make buying a used e-bike a whole lot more straightforward.
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So there you have it. When you’re looking out at the vast field of e-bikes on the market today, these lesser-known Bosch advantages might not be immediately apparent. But when you start thinking of your e-bike purchase as a vehicle purchase, choosing a brand that thinks the same way starts to make a whole lot of sense.
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