What's the best bike from Halfords or Decathlon?

cyclebuddy

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 2, 2016
1,545
732
Beds & Norfolk
Do you work for Ebco then?
I bought this bike "blind". I just asked myself beforehand exactly the same questions you're asking now: Why is this bike being discounted so heavily, how reliable is this system in the first place, who is going to fix it if/when it goes wrong, how easy is it to fix, where are the parts going to come from, will parts be available in the future, is the supplier likely to still be around, what would repairs likely cost me... what is the true "whole of life" cost of this product? It's just due diligence.
 

Chris M

Pedelecer
Dec 31, 2018
111
153
It might be worth looking at other bike shops. Both me and my brother got a discount of between 10 and 15% from our local bike shop by just politely asking what they could do. That's a better discount than you are being offered at Halfords and opens up a whole lot more bikes.
I like (and bought) the Cube Acid allroad. The mudguards don't look sexy but they do stop an awful lot of mud and water. It now comes with the latest generation Bosch CX motor.
 

MikeS

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 29, 2018
299
73
73
EDIT: To the OP: The Crossfuse is a nice bike with a number of fans/owners here. It does have better suspension forks than the Ebco, but a less powerful motor (40Nm against 58Nm) and 9-speed Alivio gearing against 10-speed Deore. Hydraulic brakes are the same M315's. And it costs £1700 against £1100 (before allowing for your employee discount). I'm going to get off my soap-box now, and just say (any motor preference aside) that IMHO the Ebco is the nicer, better made bike overall!
My Cross fuse has a 50nm motor and I'm pretty sure that they all do. It's the ActiveLine Plus. Yes they have put the price up a lot since they realised it's a much better bike than the Carrera. Halfords will give anyone 10% discount if you just ask - in my experience. I thought the suspension forks might need replacing as they are bottom of the range (£28 I think) but they have been fine over 2200 miles. Buy a Suntour seat post for £50 - then you have a suspension bike front and back and still are able to fit a normal rack.
Mike
 

cyclebuddy

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 2, 2016
1,545
732
Beds & Norfolk
My Cross fuse has a 50nm motor and I'm pretty sure that they all do. It's the ActiveLine Plus.
That's my bad... I thought it was the ordinary Active Line when I looked at one in-store. I test rode a couple of Cube's with the Plus; I thought the gear sensing was a nice touch. I think the NEX forks are okay for what they are - there are better, but there are far worse too!
 
Last edited:

Hucknallred

Finding my (electric) wheels
Nov 5, 2019
11
1
Just to thrown another option into the mix, I viewed the thread by the guy who fitted a Whoosh kit to his existing bike.
I think my existing 13 Hybrid would be an ideal donor bike, what do others think. For a DIY conversion I'd rather go rear wheel than BB replacement. What say others?
I'm pondering this due to the lower outlay & the fact that I'd be selling the 13 & wouldn't get a deal for what is a half decent bike, it was a lot more than the £200 Halfords appear to have been knocking them out for.
They were decent bikes but the brand never took off & was dropped.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: D C

sjpt

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 8, 2018
3,642
2,652
Winchester
Looks appropriate. (It would have been a bargain at £200; no longer available). If you contact Woosh they will advise of any likely issues and give comments on bottom bracket vs hub conversion. You'll probably lose at least some of the front gears with a crank conversion, and need to be careful about cassette/freehub on a rear hub conversion.
 

vfr400

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 12, 2011
9,822
3,985
Basildon
It's a perfect bike for conversion. I'd use a rear cassette motor. 48V gives more power options.

They knocked those bikes out for £150 on the final clearance. What a bargain!
 

Neilski73

Just Joined
Dec 11, 2019
1
0
I have been trying to ride one of these for a couple of months. Been to their flagship store and every time they would have put one together. I phoned the head office and they said well you can buy one and you have 365 days to return it if you don't like it. I bit the bullet and ordered one have had it for 2 days I love it, but I get what sounds like a grinding noise from the back (probably the disk breaks) when I hit about 16mph and seems to pull back. I know the motor only supplies assistance upto about 15.5 mph but on the bikes I have tried before I don't remember this happening. Using it for a 5 mile commute and hopefully off road at the weekends
 

RichB

Pedelecer
Feb 12, 2013
143
15
I have been trying to ride one of these for a couple of months. Been to their flagship store and every time they would have put one together. I phoned the head office and they said well you can buy one and you have 365 days to return it if you don't like it. I bit the bullet and ordered one have had it for 2 days I love it, but I get what sounds like a grinding noise from the back (probably the disk breaks) when I hit about 16mph and seems to pull back. I know the motor only supplies assistance upto about 15.5 mph but on the bikes I have tried before I don't remember this happening. Using it for a 5 mile commute and hopefully off road at the weekends
The EBCO MH-05 motor suffers the same thing, the assistance shuts off at 15.5 mph and then really feels like it's dragging, makes it difficult to pedal above that speed.
I guess these bikes are cheap for a reason. If it was me I'd go with a conversion kit.
 

Onegirlandherbike

Finding my (electric) wheels
Oct 20, 2019
13
3
My husband and myself only started riding in May this year and I bought a second hand Raleigh Motus ebike with a 400Wh battery. My husband bought a new Kalkhoff Endeavour with a 600Wh battery. We did the Coast and Castles route in August and my battery nearly ran out one day after 45 miles but my husband's had quite a lot left "in the bank" so when we got home I sold my Raleigh and bought a Kalkhoff too. My advise to you would be to decide what sort of riding you want to do - if you think you might want to do long distances then make sure you get a bike with a 500Wh or bigger battery to give you the opportunity to go further without having to think about charging it mid day.

As mentioned above, try other local bike shops. We bought ours from Edinburgh Cycle Coop in Newcastle and got really good discounts plus other free goodies (bike locks, helmet, spare tubes to name a few).