One of the interesting things about this bike is it evolved from the carbon fiber bike we saw in the previous thread. This Phasor is not just clone of a stealth or a greyborg. David made some changes to the bike geometry based on riding that old design hard....big drops etc. He said he had been building up the size of jumps leading to this 7 foot drop in this video, and this weekend he plans to take some even more intense jumps. You guys might remember photos of the carbon fiber taking this same 7 foot drop. This was the first time this chromoly version of the frame would take this jump, and David was a little nervous if the bike could handle it because after all this is a prototype. David did seem releieved after taking the first jump (the one in the video) that the frame did indeed hold up (he ended up doing a total of 3 drops). Holding the camera, i was kind of secretly hoping for a lfp moment (and you know the bike is dangerous?) On the production version, if any weaknesses are found now they could be strengthened thicker steel used etc. Based on riding this bike, David did mention some small changes he will make on production version to improve on the prototype. David seems like a rare type. Not only a talented mechanical engineer, but also an avid builder, and a hard core rider. He also seems like a true perfectionist. After meeting with him i trust he is the type to design a kick ass bike. It is no wonder that his very first build, the carbon fiber prototype on the other thread, was such an ES standout, one of the nicest builds i have seen on here. It was Dogati himself who commented in that thread that David should take that frame into production....and now a few years later..he is doing just that. David said that when he built that first bike he had no intention of ever selling...he was building to build it as his senior design project...and for the love of building which he has always had in him. In case you haven't heard, a mechanical engineer who actually builds with his hands, can builds and enjoys building is a rare thing. It is a sweet idea conceptually that David applied his skills to design something using solidworks, and then used his unique skills as a builder to bring that conception to a reality. The materialization of the Phasor bike, and actually seeing it in person was inspiring for me, since i have been following his build threads since the beginning. Its amazing to me that the bike is actually available for anyone to buy now....and it is such a sweet ride.
Flashback to that early build thread:

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The fact is the Phasor is being tested to see if it will hold up to gigantic drops etc and so far it is holding up good.
Also a big benefit David mentioned about offering the frame in Chromoly, if some hard core rider does happen to break one, it can be welded and fixed pretty easily. If you break a carbon fiber frame its over. I was suprised there was only a 3 pound difference between carbon fiber frame and swing arm and chromoly frame and swingarm. I am assuming the carbon fiber version was much stronger than this steel version...but that is just a guess.
Good on you guys who took a chance and laid down cash for this bike. I think it is a good thing to see an American student building an ebike from the ground up and actually bringing it to market and you guys are supporting that effort. This is definitely a quality bike and at half the price of the bomber....IMO the stealth bomber has nothing over this bike and i have ridden both. I think many forum members here will opt for a bigger motor...the hubzilla or the 5304 crystalite like on the Bomber to get bomber like performance. But i thought this 80 pound bike with bmc v3 cranking 2000 watts was a nice choice. The bike felt extremely balanced, efficient, and powerful enough. You do after all have the down hills to get crazy...and being 40 pounds lighter than the Stealth and not having all that weight in the rear wheel does have its advantages handling wise. I remember when riding the Steatlh Bomber with its heavy weight and draggy motor that the pedals seemed like they were added as a technicality so you can call it an ebike. The Phasor with the bmc still pedaled and felt like a bike. But i really am partial to the BMC motor being a San Francsico guy (a lot of us run bmc's because of proximity to Ilia at ebikes-sf). The wonderful thing about the Phasor is you can build it in any configuration you want motor and battery wise. It will hold up to 56 volt 40ah in lipo battery.
In short, I can vouch for this bike and think it is a good thing to lay cash down. I cant think of a better deal in terms of commercially available high performance bikes. It is annoying that you have to source all the components yourself. David said in the future he hopes to provide some components and eventually complete bikes.
Just to throw something out there..the white brothers groove 200 fork, the same fork that comes on the stealth bomber at a $1200 upgrade price (cough) has been on ebay and online bike stores lately brand new for $500. Also the stock bomber fork RST-R1 is a $250 fork. And the rest of the bicycle components on the stealth are not that expensive. The v-boxx is nice..but heavy and ugly as a barrel of monkey butts. I think a sclumpf high speed drive, or the less expensive schlumpf clone is a great choice for the phaser...and just a single speed free wheel on the back (as the stealth fighter comes)
According to my math, you could stock this bike with a hubzilla motor, and as good if not better components than what are on the Stealth and save %50 over the price of the stealth, and help a noble effort which is a young american engineer fresh out of college hoping to make a living building electric bikes in really tough times to be an american building anything to sale.