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Manufacturing

E-bike company that featured on Dragons' Den praised after refusing to manufacture in China

Mark and Hugo Palmer, the co-founders of e-bike gadget firm RevolutionWorks, failed to secure investment on the BBC show

Mark Palmer, right, and his son Hugo have created a gadget called Revos which can turn a push bike into an e-bike(Image: RevolutionWorks)

A Bristol engineer who walked away from Dragons’ Den empty handed because he refused to move production of his bike gadget from Britain to China, said he has been inundated with support.

Mark Palmer and his son Hugo set up their company, RevolutionWorks, in 2016 and have developed a gizmo - called Revos - that turns a regular push bike into an e-bike in under 10 minutes.

The entrepreneur, who is based at Filwood Business Park in Hengrove, said despite positive comments from all the dragons he failed to get funding because he was told his product was “too expensive” to produce in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

RevolutionWorks currently carries out all its manufacturing in Bristol and employs people locally.

Mr Palmer asked the dragons for £100,000 for 8% of his company - but could not persuade any of them to part with their cash.

He said he was disappointed not to receive investment, as the BBC had invited him to appear on the show, but going to China was “the opposite” of what the company wanted to do.

“We like making things and we want to employ people in this country and we don’t think it’s sustainable to drag everything across to China,” he told BusinessLive.

“[The dragons] were very positive towards us, especially Peter Jones. Tej Lelvani suggested we make it internationally and we said no. But I think they all thought it was too expensive.