Disabled cyclist; with one bad choice behind her, needs help with a new bike

Katymac

Pedelecer
Mar 18, 2017
174
45
57
Norfolk
I know what I don't want (I already have that)

I need a low step through, with shedloads of power to take me not very fast, everywhere, even up hills

I needs to be light, with big wheels, suspension, very sit up and beg

In fact a complete cross between the 2 bikes I have

The crusa is too heavy and all the weight is at the back so it's unstable when I walk with it or load it on the train

The fazua is too big for me I can't get my leg over the bar and my legs aren't strong enough to register on the torque/motor
 

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guerney

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 7, 2021
12,029
3,369
A trike would be heavy as * so it won't increase my mobility & now I can't even open the sodding car door, so driving will only work if there is someone there to let me out ffs
This is worrying - are you sure you're still strong enough to control a bike? If you're no longer safe cycling, perhaps it's time to start a thread asking which mobility scooters are easiest to hotrod? Increasingly popular with able-bodied people. At times I'm tempted to hotrod one myself, usually when swiftly overtaken walking on the pavement by one whizzing past at who knows what speed, and annoyingly they never ring a bell or beep. Looks fun.
 
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saneagle

Esteemed Pedelecer
Oct 10, 2010
8,691
3,916
Telford
"Lightweight bikes are available but these tend to be sportu road type bikes with minimal battery size and small hubs for the fitter rider who usually only wants light assisstance now and then"

this is a missed market, the disabled rider, the older rider, the smaller rider even the pregnant rider need light weight bike - it's about wasting energy for the rider with a chronic illness

My daughter riders everywhere, but when she was pregnant, when she is travelling home from a performance/dance show she just wants to whizz home (not speed just ease/lack of effort)
The two requirements of high power and lightweight are conflicting characteristics. It's not that somebody's missing a market, it's that physics prevents it.
 

matthewslack

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 26, 2021
2,449
1,612
A bit like building a house. You can have a good house, a cheap house and a quick house. But only two of those three.
 

Nealh

Esteemed Pedelecer
Aug 7, 2014
21,447
8,767
62
West Sx RH
This thread has been going for over a year now plus the previous thread of the bike her brother built for her with the specs to suit himself.
Cat is looking for the nirvana of ebikes wihich doesn't exsist for a rider with debilitaing health issues or a movement disability. Typically one has accept there will be constraints and not think of being in one's prime when these health issues may not have exsisted or been so prominent.
A trike or legal twist and go seem the probable route

It has all been said . One can't have power , long range in a light weight bike.
The focus does seem to be a tunnel vision view all etched on an unsuitable style of bike system of a torque sensing mid drive bike . Which all in all has all been drawn out and discussed now many times , to which the answer from most is that this is just the wrong bike system for said such use with the underlying health /mobility issues.
 

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
21,265
17,268
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
It has all been said . One can't have power , long range in a light weight bike.
it's can be done.
You start with a 10kg full sus for comfort. That's the key to build a good bike because the components are very good to start with.
You add a tongsheng 85TS kit with a bag battery for 40 mile or 60 miles or HL downtube battery for 80 miles range. Total weight 14kgs with 36V 10Ah. Mine is like that. I can ride it on any trail and have a throttle if needed.
 

saneagle

Esteemed Pedelecer
Oct 10, 2010
8,691
3,916
Telford
it's can be done.
You start with a 10kg full sus for comfort. That's the key to build a good bike because the components are very good to start with.
You add a tongsheng 85TS kit with a bag battery for 40 mile or 60 miles or HL downtube battery for 80 miles range. Total weight 14kgs with 36V 10Ah. Mine is like that. I can ride it on any trail and have a throttle if needed.
I thought we already established that a a system with torque multiplication was unsuitable for her. Why do we keep going round and round in circles, with people keep recommending what's suitable for themselves instead of for Katy? She wants lightweight, power without much pedal effort and enough range.
 

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
21,265
17,268
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
I thought we already established that a a system with torque multiplication was unsuitable for her.
We go in circles because you are looking at factory made bikes which are always less flexible than kits.
I think she only has to dial up assist level to 3, 4 and 5 instead of 2 o3 that I am on most of the time. She can always fall back on the throttle if 4 or 5 are insufficient.
The 85TS has 'instant start' like Mechaniker has on his bike. The main difficulty with fitting the 85TS kit to a high performance bike is most of them have tubeless tyres. The 85TS comes with normal double wall rim, not tubeless.
 
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