My Moto 3 came in, I assembled it last night. Here in southern Maine, we have way too much snow and ice on the ground for any kind of true ride review, but I spent some time riding it around in the shop...
Fit: I am 5'7" with 29" inseam and standover is... cozy. Also, slightly long in the tt for me, but probably perfect for others. Only one size, so if you are shorter than me, forget it. It does come with an exceptionally long seatpost, but I fear taller riders will feel cramped because of the reach issue. 5'8" - 6' is probably the sweet spot for fit, maybe 6'2", but a longer stem will be necessary.
Ride: Surprisingly nimble with what feels way more like standard 29r mtn geometry than slacker cruiser angles. Feels lighter than it looks -- comes with chunky stem, no-name bars, BMX steel cranks, aluminum pedals, Electra knobbies, no name rims which look fairly beefy.
Quality: Meh. The frame seems decent, although the welds are hardly top notch. No doubt stong, but not the best aluminum welding I've ever seen. Acceptable. All the ancillarieis--crank, bb, hs, stem, bars, seatpost, saddle--are generic, serviceable, nothing to write home about; not junk, not bling. The wheels seem slightly downscale, but time and miles will tell -- if they hold up, great, if not, awesome time to upgrade. Never owned a SRAM i3 hub before, but I've heard they are fine. I actually like the Hayes MX-5 mechanical disk brakes better than just about most other mechanicals at the same level. And the grips are nice.
Subjective: The paint is actually pretty decent, right out of the box, but it's matte. And cream. Which means it will be dirty in no time, and never come clean again. Wish it was gloss. Otherwise, I think it's a pretty sweet bike for the money. Other co-worker cancelled his order for a Moto 1 previously, but after riding the 3 through the shop, now wants to get one for use as a SS offroad bike. Based on how sturdy it felt, he's not hesitating to get one for offroad use.
Of course, I get it together and the first thing I think of is upgrades. Easiest will be tires, depending on what I do with it -- lighter, real knobbies for offroad work, or I have a pair of Schwalbe Big Apple off another project to fit for road use. I imagine pounds of weight to be saved vs. the Electra knobbies. And I think just tire swap for the time being, but of course if I go nuts with it, pretty much everything else is up for grabs, too -- rims/spokes/front hub, hs/stem/bars, crank, seat and post. Alfine 8/11...
I've always lusted after a klunker/cruiser designed bike like this, just missed out on the Sawyer and other of its ilk; can't justify a Retrotec. So this will do for a while. Just a bike to mess around on, no serious on or offroad excursions. Lunch/shop bike. May end up with a basket on it... Basically bought it as a cool frameset which just happens to come with enough components on it to make it rideable out of the box.
Yes I did peel the Made in China sticker off it...