Hi all, my first post here.
I currently have an old btwin MTB that I bought secondhand over 10 years ago, and also a rather tired 20 year old Trek (a cheap recent impulse purchase) and I'm getting back into some intermediate level mostly off-road stuff after not doing much riding for a few years. I'm no expert rider, so I'll be the limiting factor on any riding, not the bike.
At 62 years old, and with a desk job, the uphills are pretty tough, and if I ride from home every one of the 4 roads out of the village is soon a climb, so I'm thinking about adding an electric kit, but I don't want to throw silly money at it. The bikes can't be worth more than £200 each, I'd guess. I'd also like to keep the option of removing the kit as and when it's not necessary, and swapping it between the bikes, but I guess lots of people say that and then never remove it!
I want to keep it all nice and legal, I just don't want the hassle of some over-zealous official giving me a fine in these days of media hysteria against e-bikes, so 250W continuous rated power, asssist to 15.5mph, etc. I have no desire to go tearing about at silly high speeds - I just want to get up hills without being so knackered that I don't want to ride further, and I want to avoid using hills as an excuse to not go out next time.
I'm happy that I can fit a kit myself, but would be cautious about trying to put an assortment of bits together from different suppliers, etc., unless with a lot of guidance. But maybe some folk here can point me to a practical way to build from bits.
So having looked at various kits, and discounted any front hub as I think that won't be much good on a slippery steep climb, and wanting the ability to swap the kit between my 2 bikes (both 26 inch) steers me away from mid-mount, unless I'm being stupid/naive to avoid mid-mount - feel free to say so - then that suggests rear hub motor. Both bikes are full suspension, so that eliminates rack mount batteries, so frame mount I think.
The sort of things I'm looking at (all full kits inc. built up wheel with 250W motor, 13 to 20Ah battery, controller, cables, display, etc.):
YOSE Power, about £330.
Boost, about £700.
Whoosh, about £600.
Online user reviews of YOSE seem to be very polarised, I think it was Trustpilot with 41% very good and 39% very bad, and customer support is from China, so concerning about customer support, albeit my one email got a good clear response in 24 hours.
Boost seems very expensive, especially with the low battery capacity, but at least UK-based so likely better customer support.
Whoosh seems promising, but pretty pricy, and again at least UK-based.
So I thought I'd seek more credible opinions on this forum.
Other suggestions welcome.
Thanks in advance.
Rick
I currently have an old btwin MTB that I bought secondhand over 10 years ago, and also a rather tired 20 year old Trek (a cheap recent impulse purchase) and I'm getting back into some intermediate level mostly off-road stuff after not doing much riding for a few years. I'm no expert rider, so I'll be the limiting factor on any riding, not the bike.
At 62 years old, and with a desk job, the uphills are pretty tough, and if I ride from home every one of the 4 roads out of the village is soon a climb, so I'm thinking about adding an electric kit, but I don't want to throw silly money at it. The bikes can't be worth more than £200 each, I'd guess. I'd also like to keep the option of removing the kit as and when it's not necessary, and swapping it between the bikes, but I guess lots of people say that and then never remove it!
I want to keep it all nice and legal, I just don't want the hassle of some over-zealous official giving me a fine in these days of media hysteria against e-bikes, so 250W continuous rated power, asssist to 15.5mph, etc. I have no desire to go tearing about at silly high speeds - I just want to get up hills without being so knackered that I don't want to ride further, and I want to avoid using hills as an excuse to not go out next time.
I'm happy that I can fit a kit myself, but would be cautious about trying to put an assortment of bits together from different suppliers, etc., unless with a lot of guidance. But maybe some folk here can point me to a practical way to build from bits.
So having looked at various kits, and discounted any front hub as I think that won't be much good on a slippery steep climb, and wanting the ability to swap the kit between my 2 bikes (both 26 inch) steers me away from mid-mount, unless I'm being stupid/naive to avoid mid-mount - feel free to say so - then that suggests rear hub motor. Both bikes are full suspension, so that eliminates rack mount batteries, so frame mount I think.
The sort of things I'm looking at (all full kits inc. built up wheel with 250W motor, 13 to 20Ah battery, controller, cables, display, etc.):
YOSE Power, about £330.
Boost, about £700.
Whoosh, about £600.
Online user reviews of YOSE seem to be very polarised, I think it was Trustpilot with 41% very good and 39% very bad, and customer support is from China, so concerning about customer support, albeit my one email got a good clear response in 24 hours.
Boost seems very expensive, especially with the low battery capacity, but at least UK-based so likely better customer support.
Whoosh seems promising, but pretty pricy, and again at least UK-based.
So I thought I'd seek more credible opinions on this forum.
Other suggestions welcome.
Thanks in advance.
Rick