I had a word with one of the Reps who comes to my shop on Monday about 11 tooth bottom geared freewheels.
They used to be made but have been abandoned because of the number of failures. The 11 tooth sprockets were prone to snapping of. They are no longer available on 7 or 8 speed freewheels, but they can be found on some 5 and 6 speeds, where they are intended for childrens bikes and not expected to have the same force applied. They may however give problems when fitted to e-bikes.
Given the choice, and wanting to use a derailer I would opt for a 9speed cassette. These will give a neat 11 to 34 tooth range with Sram shifters, but the Dual Drive ( combining a 3 speed hub and a 9 speed cassatte ) is a lovely bit of kit and would be soooo tempting.
I currently run a 7 speed Nexus, off my old Lafree, with a twin ring chainset, ( 20 teeth at the back with 44 and 52 at the front ), I admit I haven't yet got around to fitting the front changer so it's a stop and lean over the bike job to change rings.
Without power the big ring is just to high for real hills but with the motor on they become manageable, for comfort and steep hills I still need the 44 tooth chain wheel.
I'm off now to work out my gear inches, I've wondered what they were for ages.
They used to be made but have been abandoned because of the number of failures. The 11 tooth sprockets were prone to snapping of. They are no longer available on 7 or 8 speed freewheels, but they can be found on some 5 and 6 speeds, where they are intended for childrens bikes and not expected to have the same force applied. They may however give problems when fitted to e-bikes.
Given the choice, and wanting to use a derailer I would opt for a 9speed cassette. These will give a neat 11 to 34 tooth range with Sram shifters, but the Dual Drive ( combining a 3 speed hub and a 9 speed cassatte ) is a lovely bit of kit and would be soooo tempting.
I currently run a 7 speed Nexus, off my old Lafree, with a twin ring chainset, ( 20 teeth at the back with 44 and 52 at the front ), I admit I haven't yet got around to fitting the front changer so it's a stop and lean over the bike job to change rings.
Without power the big ring is just to high for real hills but with the motor on they become manageable, for comfort and steep hills I still need the 44 tooth chain wheel.
I'm off now to work out my gear inches, I've wondered what they were for ages.