I think this is the perfect example of what i was talking about in the other thread. Brammo starts investing more into racing to show the viability of affordable electric motorcycles, slow down their production of new products, start negotiating with bigger companies and things happen. Some possibilities:
1. Brammo and BMW reach an agreement for Brammo to provide parts/designs for BMW's new products. In this case, we have to ask if Brammo will continue to produce consumer-oriented motorcycles.
2. BMW buys out Brammo and uses the technology to produce their own bikes. We will not see our empulses and maybe not even the enertia plus, but we will get some sort of an EV based on the same principles.
3. BMW buys out Brammo to stop Brammo from putting out a high quality product before BMW. Bye, bye empulse.
4. Brammo and BMW reach a distribution agreement as long as Brammo doesn't produce EV that can compete directly with BMW's EVs. In this scenario, I think BMW will produce higher end, more expensive motorcycles and let Brammo keep the cheaper market. I see empulse being the center of the negotiations here.
5. BMW looks at the empulse and replicates the technology. With their size and distribution network, they can put Brammo out of business quickly.
6. Nothing happens. BMW produces their own EV and Brammo keeps working on my empulse until I am old and impaired.
7. BMW's announcement that they will dominate the EV market in 3 years (different from what Gavin said, they want to dominate the market in 3 years, which means they will be putting a product out in 6-18 months), puts some fire in Brammo's butt and they decide to release a supper-duper empulse 12 RR for $5,000.00 in 3 months and we are all happy Brammo's loyal customers.
8. Same as 7, but Brammo keeps the 2012 production date. The first few hundreds bikes are delivered by the end of 2012. By then, BMW announces their ebike with a competitive price (let's say $10 K as BMW doesn't really sell anything affordable) and overruns Brammo with sheer production and distribution might by selling some 5,000 bikes by the end of 2012.
None of these scenarios with the exception of Brammo releasing the Empulse and the Plus as soon as they have a reliable product in hands looks good for us buyers. For Brammo, many scenarios look better on the business end than actually producing and selling the Empulse. So, can anyone knock on their door and ask them what the plans are?