No longer have a car, new to Ebikes...

Volusia25

Pedelecer
Apr 21, 2017
243
106
33
leicester
Hi, new here.
I've not really cycled for a few years and was driving everywhere but can't drive for the next 18 months or so. So here is what I need:

  • Budget £1000 max
  • Fits someone 5ft 11, 11 stone ish
  • Capable of travelling a 35 mile round trip on one charge
  • Can handle quite hilly areas with moderate inclines and declines
  • Reliable
  • For a man
  • Preferably a warranty

I'm still doing research on them but thats my criteria. The 35 mile round trip won't be every day, maybe once or twice a week. But most days I will need to do a 12 mile round trip.
Thanks in advance.
 
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Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
19,473
16,419
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
Hello Volusia25,

I would suggest the Woosh Karoo
It will easily do 35 miles on one charge. Some customers managed to squeeze more than 70 miles out of one charge. Price: £899 including delivery. Battery: 13AH with Samsung cells. Very low maintenance.

http://wooshbikes.co.uk/?karoo



If you rather buy an MTB, then take a look at the new Woosh Rio MTB.
Price £1,049, 13AH battery.

http://wooshbikes.co.uk/?rio-mtb

 
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Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
19,473
16,419
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
the Woosh Rio is a much more powerful bike in comparison to the Carrera. The Rio has more powerful motor, larger capacity battery, better crankset, lighter fork, better tyres.
The Rio also has sensors on the brakes and a throttle.
 
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Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
19,473
16,419
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
Is it quite new because I cant find many reviews on it.
The Rio is our newest model. Hopefully, there will be reviews in a few months.

Also how does your warranty and set up work?
The Rio is sold by mail order. It arrives in a big carton, you will have to put the pedals and put the handlebars back on. The bike is guaranteed for one year against all material defects.
 
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Neil5403

Pedelecer
Feb 5, 2017
213
16
Staffs, England ST15
I would recommend the Carrera over a mail order bike. There is a Halfords in every town, the warranty is very good and the bike is a great piece of kit at the price, great all rounder,which is also on sale at the moment. Can't go wrong..
 

RobF

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 22, 2012
4,732
2,311
Sounds like you will be relying on the bike, so service is very important to you.

I'm not the biggest fan of woosh bikes - as woosh will tell you - but one would knock a Carrera into the proverbial cocked hat.

A £1,000 ebike is not going to be the best quality, but with the Carrera you are stuck with Halfords' not so legendary service.

Anything goes wrong the staff will not have a clue, meaning it has to go through the customer unfriendly send it back routine.

At least with a woosh you have genuine telephone support, and they will send a spare part to you same day if it's something you can fit yourself.

Another make to look at is wisper, they sell through dealers and operate a loan bike if yours can't be fixed quickly scheme.
 

soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,120
6,313
upload_2017-4-21_22-10-55.png
£1500 but will have to order it from Germany
 

Neil5403

Pedelecer
Feb 5, 2017
213
16
Staffs, England ST15
Have to disagree with the Carerra 'slaters'. They do what you need from an electric bike very well. Admittedly the Halfords staff are not the most knowledgable on the subject but the few small issues I have had I just pop into my nearest one and they fix it there and then or swap the offending article for one in stock and away you go..Do that with Woosh etc !
I have 2 of them and am very impressed. Would never consider a mail order bike, for the reasons above.
 

Volusia25

Pedelecer
Apr 21, 2017
243
106
33
leicester
Hmm thanks for the responses.
My situation is I was convicted for drink driving. Not proud at all, in fact still mentally struggling with the whole event, but I have to take my mind off it and make steps to continue life.
So the bike will be my main mode of transport since my village has no bus routes. Nearest city is 17 miles of hills, nearest town is 2 miles where I could lock the bike up and get a bus from there to the city but, with summer coming, I could do with getting fitter and getting a tan while im at it.
The halfords bike is nice but lacks lights and a pannier rack which would be nice. Since I was planning to go touring with a tent on my motorbike, obviously I cant now so i'd be relying on the bicycle for a similar experience.

With regards to quality, i've only ever owned £130 mountain bikes so surely even a £900 ebike would feel to me, superior to anything i've ridden before?
I'm based in South Leicestershire by the way, if anyone knows of good retailers to try.
I have noticed Woosh advertise a lot on this forum, but not prepared to order a bike with no reviews on it, plus some reviews on the FB page leave a bit to be desired
 
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redcup1999

Pedelecer
Sep 4, 2016
213
126
Bristol
Have to disagree with the Carerra 'slaters'. They do what you need from an electric bike very well. Admittedly the Halfords staff are not the most knowledgable on the subject but the few small issues I have had I just pop into my nearest one and they fix it there and then or swap the offending article for one in stock and away you go..Do that with Woosh etc !
I have 2 of them and am very impressed. Would never consider a mail order bike, for the reasons above.
It sounds like you have a very good local Halfords - glad to hear you have had a good experience!

My experience with two Crossfire-Es (mine and my partner's) is less satisfactory.

When mine had a fault I was without it for 3 weeks. It came back still not fixed (subsequently refunded).

My partner is still waiting for her's to be fixed - she has been without it for several weeks now.

You pays your money and takes your choice. The Crossfire-e is a great bike when working though.
 
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soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,120
6,313
well you want alot for a bike that dont cost much ie 1000 quid range but with 17 miles of hills unless you can use a low power mode and can put the effort in then might come up short if you are not fit enough to do it.

you need to test ride some first cheap and expensive ones as you get what you pay for ;)
 
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soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,120
6,313

Volusia25

Pedelecer
Apr 21, 2017
243
106
33
leicester
With regards to quality, i've only ever owned £130 mountain bikes so surely even a £900 ebike would feel to me, superior to anything i've ridden before?

ill give this as a example of what you get for ur money bike parts wise.
http://www.tredz.co.uk/.Fox-Racing-Shox-34-K-Float-27-5-650b-FIT4-Suspension-Fork-120mm-2017_93030.htm

if you look after them and service them they will last for years and years cheap forks wont as the service cost for a fox for is more than a cheap one costs.
Thats insane money. Mint condition used motorcycle shocks would be half that (for my motorbike). You could buy a runaround car for that money in fact
 

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
19,473
16,419
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
if you look after them and service them they will last for years and years cheap forks wont as the service cost for a fox for is more than a cheap one costs.
SW, what do you try to prove?

If someone wants to know how expensive the service parts are for fox forks, check the price list:
http://www.mojostore.co.uk/shock-parts-c102x2665091
you need a lot of training to service a fox float fork like the one SW linked to.
There is currently a thread about cost per mile to run a bike as a transport.
It is not cheap if you have to take your bike to a bike shop for simple maintenance tasks.

(crossed with the OP's post above)
 

soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,120
6,313
well if you know shocks then decent ones cost money and cheap ones are just that.

what does a set of forks off a moto gp race bike cost ;)
DSC_0706_01.JPG

that is you need a lot of training to service a fox float fork like the one SW linked to.

i changed the seals my self they was 25 quid a pack and some fox oil and youtube ;)

 

Volusia25

Pedelecer
Apr 21, 2017
243
106
33
leicester
I dont understand where this thread is going? With maintenance and servicing I can do all that myself but if the retailer has a warranty, they can do it until it runs out. I'm used to working on cars and motorcycles so a bicycle is pretty simple for me. I'd likely sell the bike after 18 months anyway and go back to driving.
 

soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,120
6,313
after that time a cheap bike will not be worth selling as the most expensive part is the batt. ;)
 

soundwave

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 23, 2015
16,120
6,313