Well commuting to gym and day job will be 2 hours and then food delivery for around 3/4 hours so total 5/6 hours. Yh that’s fair, I’ll try 1 batt first.How many hours daily? Start with one battery and see how it goes. 20Ah is a lot.
Well commuting to gym and day job will be 2 hours and then food delivery for around 3/4 hours so total 5/6 hours. Yh that’s fair, I’ll try 1 batt first.How many hours daily? Start with one battery and see how it goes. 20Ah is a lot.
I see, I’ll will look into hub motors for sure now , has been mentions by Az also.Every food delivery bike I've ever seen used a hub motor. I believe they're selected for reliability, ease of repair at low cost.
Start with food delivery. Put some effort into it and at the end of the day you might not need to go to the gymWell commuting to gym and day job will be 2 hours and then food delivery for around 3/4 hours so total 5/6 hours. Yh that’s fair, I’ll try 1 batt first.
48v gets you 30% more capacity and gives you more options for the amount of power. They're around £300 for a 20Ah one from Greenace. You're not going to do 5 hrs with one battery unless you do a lot of pedalling and I wouldn't use a crank-drive for that sort of riding.Well commuting to gym and day job will be 2 hours and then food delivery for around 3/4 hours so total 5/6 hours. Yh that’s fair, I’ll try 1 batt first.
Looking stay in level speed limits so 15.5mphmore speed = more power = more waight so if you want to do 50mph with no effort its not going to happen.
nothing that delvers food to me is road legal gangs of um outside mcdonalds ect even plod uses them
Yes 48v seems better and £300 is decent, ah ok so you suggest a hub drive also. I’ll be going over London Bridge quite a lot, will a hub drive be ok for that? Reason I started looking into mid drives in the first place was that it seemed better for riding up inclines compared to hub.48v gets you 30% more capacity and gives you more options for the amount of power. They're around £300 for a 20Ah one from Greenace. You're not going to do 5 hrs with one battery unless you do a lot of pedalling and I wouldn't use a crank-drive for that sort of riding.
It's an urban myths that hub motors don't climb hills as well as crank drives. If you run with 48v, a hub-motor can tackle any normal hill with ease. You get 30% extra torque compared with 36v.Yes 48v seems better and £300 is decent, ah ok so you suggest a hub drive also. I’ll be going over London Bridge quite a lot, will a hub drive be ok for that? Reason I started looking into mid drives in the first place was that it seemed better for riding up inclines compared to hub.
Fairs, appreciate the adviseIt's an urban myths that hub motors don't climb hills as well as crank drives. If you run with 48v, a hub-motor can tackle any normal hill with ease. You get 30% extra torque compared with 36v.
Crank motors should be confined to off-road use only. They don't make sense for a bike that's going to be used on the road.Likewise, you can go for a 48V crank drive kit if you need more power. The advantage of cranks versus hubs is cranks can take advantage of chainring to cassette gearing while hubs can't.
Fair, I see decent optionsLikewise, you can go for a 48V crank drive kit if you need more power. The advantage of cranks versus hubs is cranks can take advantage of chainring to cassette gearing while hubs can't.
I've done this plenty of times with a hub motor, I'm sure london bridge will be fineI’ll be going over London Bridge quite a lot, will a hub drive be ok for that? Reason I started looking into mid drives in the first place was that it seemed better for riding up inclines compared to hub.
Ah yh that’s looks much steeper then London Bridge! I’m 100kg so with my backpack or food delivery bag I would be 105-110kg. Would you guys deffo recommend 48v over 36v. And does front or rear hub make a big difference. I’m starting to like the idea of less maintenance.I've done this plenty of times with a hub motor, I'm sure london bridge will be fine
48V rear hub seems like an optimal solution for you. 48V is maximum legal voltage. It will give you extra omph.Ah yh that’s looks much steeper then London Bridge! I’m 100kg so with my backpack or food delivery bag I would be 105-110kg. Would you guys deffo recommend 48v over 36v. And does front or rear hub make a big difference. I’m starting to like the idea of less maintenance.