I respect your opinion Tom. In my eyes WW is diminishing effort of others and just trying to put WW at the first place. It's not fair. Changing the names and keep talking "we this, we that"... is not fair. 90% of effort was put in development, trial and error, design, controller firmware, frame design, testing, all the investments made... WW was not a part of it but now they are creating impression they were

If someone is not up to date with the market then will be thinking it is WW the one who invented the controller or bike. It's not simply true. At the end it's all about money and this is the reason for this unfair marketing bulls**t.
If it is true partnership why aren't they keep talking about partnership? They are not highlighting Exess, Innotrace. Instead they keep talking "we this, we that" , "we haven't finished yet". hahhaha
And their battery called "Titan". They are lying!
https://wattwagons.com/products/titan
"Samsung 30Q cells, 52v 21ah 14s6p - 84 cells" - do you know it is not possible? Do you know these cells (Samsung 30Q) have 3000mAh and only when discharged with crazy small current? And in reality not even this.
Check it yourself:
https://lygte-info.dk/review/batteries2012/Samsung%20INR18650-30Q%203000mAh%20%28Pink%29%20UK.html
So WW claims this battery has 21 Ah! How? The math i know and nature laws in physics are saying something different. Assuming 3 Ah capacity (now we know it is less, but hey! Let's give WW a chance!

) 6 cells in parallel gives 18 Ah. Isn't it? The highest measured energy per cell as per the vendor datasheet is 10.6 Wh @ 0.2C discharge ( 3000 mAh * 0.2 = 0.6 A discharge current). What does it mean? It means 84 cells times 10.6 Wh = 890.4 Wh of energy and that much ONLY if you are discharging the battery with 6P * 0.6 A which is 3.6 A. What does it mean? Well it means 3.6 * 52 V (nominal battery voltage, like an average) = 187 W
Only few Customers have Phd. in physics, even less will understand the phenomena behind the numbers and even less Customers are able to figure it out by them self. So i don't like when the seller is lying to bump up the selling numbers! The subject is more complicated and i'll not go into the details here (i.e. let's ask WW what is the max charging voltage per cell and the cut off voltage per cell (DoD is related with this) as these parameters have EXCEPTIONALLY BIG IMPACT on battery life and performance).
So to all Customers planning to buy "Titan" battery from Watt Wagons - be aware that this battery WILL NOT be as good as WW is claiming. Actually is it not possible to make a battery pack of this small size to keep up with the power demand of 2300 W too often. Samsung 30Q cells are well known (check forum - people are testing the cells) to have a pretty LOW CYCLE life if treated like power cell. This is the real problem as using 2300 W quite often (which i think is the reason the Customer wants to pay for this controller

) will lead to premature battery degradation. And you will see it very soon. If you are riding a lot it will be the same season when you see your battery is getting less capable.
And there is no single word of explanation from WW to make their Customers aware what are they buying and what should they be aware of it term of reliability (cycle life), real capacity (now they are just lying IMHO) and consequences of using this controller 2300 W with such a small battery backs like the Titan (not mentioning the stock battery pack)!
They should be PROPERLY INFORMED about cons BEFORE they take any purchase decision.
I just want them to tell the Customers the truth. Nothing more. Is it too much?