I am looking to make / convert / buy a 20 inch wheel folding bike for use in the Malvern Hills, by a 70Kg + rucksack wearing adult and would appreciate the advice of those more knowledgable than me. She is about to undergo knee surgery so in the short turn much human powered input is unlikely, and a throttle is needed.
After testing many bikes as Prestigne I had almost discounted 24V on power grounds until I discovered the Cyclone Kits that use the bikes gears. These are available in power ratings from 200W to 1000W and I wonder how much is actually needed as weight of the bike is a consideration. I was thinking 500W may be about right but is that amount of power too much, too little or about right? Certainly it's a lot of amps at 24V, although Ping say they can make a custom battery that will cope. Range needs to be 20 miles min and preferably more than that.
The main task is a 4 mile continuous climb which is 1 in 4 in places and maybe half that for most of it. Speed isn't a great concern as going too fast on 20 inch wheels with pot holes around isn't a good idea.
I welcome all inputs / suggestions / comments.
If there is sufficient demand for this I may turn it into a commercial product.
Thanks
Kevin
After testing many bikes as Prestigne I had almost discounted 24V on power grounds until I discovered the Cyclone Kits that use the bikes gears. These are available in power ratings from 200W to 1000W and I wonder how much is actually needed as weight of the bike is a consideration. I was thinking 500W may be about right but is that amount of power too much, too little or about right? Certainly it's a lot of amps at 24V, although Ping say they can make a custom battery that will cope. Range needs to be 20 miles min and preferably more than that.
The main task is a 4 mile continuous climb which is 1 in 4 in places and maybe half that for most of it. Speed isn't a great concern as going too fast on 20 inch wheels with pot holes around isn't a good idea.
I welcome all inputs / suggestions / comments.
If there is sufficient demand for this I may turn it into a commercial product.
Thanks
Kevin