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Kudos Tourer - Sixth months / 2,500 miles in
I'm up to 6,600 miles now. The battery is still fine. It's summer, so the Nexus hub seems to be behaving itself (or maybe it's because I put a drop in the cable). It had a new chain at 6,000 miles because the old one was a bit stretched. Only one puncture since swapping to Schwalbe Marathons - much better than the Kenda tyres it came with. This bike seems to be holding up remarkably well to the abuse I give it.
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Kudos Tourer - Sixth months / 2,500 miles in
I'm now up to 4,000 miles in 10 months. I've added a sub-£5 LED headlamp from BangGood.com, as recommended on this forum, which has transformed my visibility riding at night. I can't recommend them highly enough, although I do recommend a dedicated cut-off switch to avoid dazzling on-coming traffic (leaving just the factory fitted lights illuminated). The only failure I've had since writing the report above is that my second chain case broke. Luckily, I was able to piece together a complete one from the two partial ones I had. It's my fault really - I caught the rear axle cover on the wheel of my other bike when bringing it in to the conservatory. Because it continues to function well, I'd be inclined to raise my original review to an 8/10.
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Emu Electric Bikes
Seasoned with what? That's the question.
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Emu Electric Bikes
I've done 2,500 miles with rigid forks, crappy rim brakes and a front motor and I'm quite happy, so they'll probably sell at least a few.
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Kudos Tourer - Sixth months / 2,500 miles in
I've been riding my Kudous Tourer on my 28 mile round-trip commute most week days for the last six months. Here are my thoughts. Reviewer: Jonathan Pallant Purchased From: e Bikes Direct Purchase Price: £999 (through cyclescheme.co.uk) Time Owned: Six months Local Terrain: Flat ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Strengths: By and large this bike just works. I charge it at night and I charge it on my desk at work. I jump on it, crank it up to maximum boost, ride it for 14 miles at around the legal limit, then get off again, twice a day. If I'm tired, I put next to no effort in and if I'm feeling fit, I lift it above the speed limiter. The saddle took some getting used to but I've have no real aches or pains (apart from my hands - I'll come on to that). My commute is largely flat, but there is a slight hill at the home end, and there are some short, but severe, inclines as the cycle path drops down to water level and then back up to embankment level. These pose no problem. The ability to change gear while stationary is amazingly useful. I do it at every set of lights I come to, while my fellow riders clack-clack-clack away on approach, or curse their choice of gear when the lights go green. The kickstand is very sturdy, as is the frame. The lights are powered from the battery and I've used them to ride in otherwise pitch-black countryside miles from any street lights. The speedo is easy to read and has a backlight you can turn on. I like the speedo in rotating mode, where it cycles between odometer, trip, stopwatch and max speed. If I forget to charge the bike it will complete both legs of the journey without trouble, but it will not complete a third. I fell off the bike in the rain (and later passed out underneath it while walking it back) and the only damage was that I bent the key in the frame lock. The key and the lock still work though. I can drop the wheels off in a few minutes, despite the necessary complications caused by the Nexus hub and particularly the roller brake, while the front motor just unplugs. The bike then fits in my car upside down quite nicely. I've added bar ends for comfort, which was easy to do. The included double-pannier straps down, rather than clipping on, but I tend to leave it on the bike all the time anyway as it carries my tool kit. As a bonus, it hides the battery quite nicely. You'll read below that a few items have needed replacing, but nothing on this bike is particularly difficult to replace, nor particularly expensive. The vendor has been most accommodating and sent replacement parts when required. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Weaknesses: I've had two tube failures so far and I'm inclined to put these down to rim tape failure rather than a puncture from something on the road. This is easy to rectify. I've also had a tyre wear through to the rope, but that was my fault for not replacing it after it deformed (probably due to a pot hole). The Kenda tyres don't offer a lot of lateral grip in driving wind and rain, so I've swapped the duff tyre for a Schwalbe Marathon. The brake lever cut-out switch failed (leaving the motor in-operable), but it was easy to first disable (by pulling a connector) and then later replace (if you splice the wires - I didn't fancy unpicking the loom and feeding the new cable through). The first two batteries didn't work, but the third is a champ. The chain case broke off, but the bike has had some abuse over kerbs and so on. The bike is heavy, but I'm able to man-handle it in and out of my conservatory up and down a step every day without trouble. At all other times the weight is irrelevant - I can easily outrun most other bikes at the lights, right up until I hit the ~15 mph limit. The Nexus hub was a bit fiddly to adjust, and it doesn't like being cold, but it's working very well at the moment. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Summary: This is a good starter bike made from simple, reliable, ingredients. The combination of Nexus hub, encased chain and front motor is perfect for commuting. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Overall Rating (out of 10) : 7/10
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Strava for E-bikes
I ride my e-bike to work every day and I get slaughtered on the time sheets by MAMILs. I should add though, it's pretty flat...
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1000 miles in...
Ah, yes, it's a Kudos Tourer. But not the one you sold the chap who lives around the corner from me. I bought mine first from eBikesDirect and he liked it so much he bought one himself. Yes I was wearing a helmet. It's now in the bin as it took a bit of a whack.
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1000 miles in...
I've been managing about four days a week on the bike on average over the last two months - thanks to bad weather, illness, holidays, accidents, etc. This is what came up on the ride home. I've had one accident so far - bike went from under me sideways while crossing a road. The tyres really don't have a lot of grip in the wet. I got up, walked to the side of the road and then passed out in a heap on the ground! My battery issues are well documented on here, but battery #3 has been fine. I can do a 26 mile round trip without recharging in the middle, but I usually charge it at both ends anyway. The gauge shows full in the picture but I've done 11 miles into a head wind at that point. I've never seen more than two blobs out! The charging indicator is weirdly unstable once the battery is charged, but it doesn't seem to affect anything. The cut-off wire came out of one of the brake levers, but I got a new lever sent out next day (although the observant will notice I haven't bothered splicing it in yet...) The only downside to cycling is fighting your way through clouds of bugs along by the lakes. I quickly learnt to check I had my sunglasses with me! Maybe we'll get to 6k by the time it's a year old?
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Brake lever
I seem to have damaged the left hand / rear brake lever on my Kudos Tourer. The mechanical lever and braking is fine, but the microswitch has failed closed-circuit, preventing the motor from running. I've unplugged it for now, and I've got a new one coming in the post but I wondered, is this common or are they normally fairly reliable?
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Has anyone ridden the Woosh Krieger?
I tried a Big Bear and another Woosh with crank drive (think it was a Sirocco CDL). I preferred the hub motor as it made changing gear much simpler and I haven't got the hills that might make the crank drive worth the bother. Nice bikes either way, and I was tempted, but Cyclescheme forced me elsewhere.
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Is kudos tornado right for me?
I'm 5'11" and around 80kg and I'm quite happy on my Kudos Tourer, although I prefer the adjustable handlebars on my old Claud Butler hybrid. It comes in under the £1000 credit limit and e-Bikes Direct shipped it direct to my door.
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Hello - it's flat here
In the morning, yes. Bit of a head wind between Longstanton and Oakington.
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Hello - it's flat here
Had a lovely ride in this morning. 13.7 miles in 58 minutes dead. Wonderful.
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Found the Kudos Tourer LCD (Bigstone C300) user manual
After much digging, I found out the Kudos Tourer (and possibly other models) is fitted with Bigstone C300 LCD. The user manual can now be found on my website here and here. It's been really bugging me having it stuck in km/h mode. Now I know what to to! Hopefully it's helpful to others too.
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Hello - it's flat here
Opening the battery has been ruled out by the manufacturer. A third battery is on its way.
Jonathan Pallant
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