First, thank you to contributors to this forum who have unknowingly helped me over the past months. I have enjoyed and benefited from reading the contributions from FLECC and others, first via Google, then more recently directly.
Buying an electric bike proved to be surprisingly tricky since there are so few places to try them out. My requirement was quite specific – it must make it possible to ride up long steep hills (12%). Also, it needed to be useable over rough ground – not hard core mountain biking, but a variety of surfaces.
To cut a long story short, The Electric Transport Shop in Oxford (nice people to deal with, by the way) fitted a 24v, high torque variant, front wheel motor to my old-style (ie non-shock absorbing front fork) mountain bike. It put the weight up more than I was expecting – now it’s about 44lbs/20kg, about half of which is the battery, compared with about 29 lbs for the bike alone.
Overall, it seems a success. Now I can pedal back up the hill and I have had great fun on hilly fields and rough paths which previously would have been impossible. My caution is that more effort is required than I’d been hoping – I’d expected to be pedalling, but I’d hoped for more of a sense of power.
Talking of power, at Presteigne, I tried a number of bikes. One thing I which stood out was the sense of power of the Heinzmann machines which I tried. I was however deterred from them by their weight and unwieldiness when cycling unpowered. Also, without having tried them, I would have automatically specified their high torque, steel geared variant; if I had done so, I would have found it intolerably noisy.
On the whole, the TETS motor, which I think they call the Sparticle, does a useful job – I am certainly going to get much fitter because of the exercise which I am now getting...
I’d be interested to know how other kits might compare eg the eZee motor. Comparisons are very difficult to make, but in case it is of use to anyone else, my own summary might be something like…
Sparticle (high torque version), 24v, 10 amp hours battery, max powered speed 10 mph. Total weight about 15 lbs (battery about 7 lbs). Cost £500; wheel build, £50; fitting £100. Hill climbing: 13.5 stone man able to cycle up half-mile plus hill, mostly 12% gradient, albeit with significant effort in low gear.
I wonder what the equivalent would be for a Heinzmann or eZee or any other?
Anyway, thanks again, FLECC and co, your knowledge has been much appreciated.
Buying an electric bike proved to be surprisingly tricky since there are so few places to try them out. My requirement was quite specific – it must make it possible to ride up long steep hills (12%). Also, it needed to be useable over rough ground – not hard core mountain biking, but a variety of surfaces.
To cut a long story short, The Electric Transport Shop in Oxford (nice people to deal with, by the way) fitted a 24v, high torque variant, front wheel motor to my old-style (ie non-shock absorbing front fork) mountain bike. It put the weight up more than I was expecting – now it’s about 44lbs/20kg, about half of which is the battery, compared with about 29 lbs for the bike alone.
Overall, it seems a success. Now I can pedal back up the hill and I have had great fun on hilly fields and rough paths which previously would have been impossible. My caution is that more effort is required than I’d been hoping – I’d expected to be pedalling, but I’d hoped for more of a sense of power.
Talking of power, at Presteigne, I tried a number of bikes. One thing I which stood out was the sense of power of the Heinzmann machines which I tried. I was however deterred from them by their weight and unwieldiness when cycling unpowered. Also, without having tried them, I would have automatically specified their high torque, steel geared variant; if I had done so, I would have found it intolerably noisy.
On the whole, the TETS motor, which I think they call the Sparticle, does a useful job – I am certainly going to get much fitter because of the exercise which I am now getting...
I’d be interested to know how other kits might compare eg the eZee motor. Comparisons are very difficult to make, but in case it is of use to anyone else, my own summary might be something like…
Sparticle (high torque version), 24v, 10 amp hours battery, max powered speed 10 mph. Total weight about 15 lbs (battery about 7 lbs). Cost £500; wheel build, £50; fitting £100. Hill climbing: 13.5 stone man able to cycle up half-mile plus hill, mostly 12% gradient, albeit with significant effort in low gear.
I wonder what the equivalent would be for a Heinzmann or eZee or any other?
Anyway, thanks again, FLECC and co, your knowledge has been much appreciated.