OK, anyone who puts that many pix of their bike in a post is already completely hooked. Which puts you in very good company here.This is my bike with the new bloom handlebars.
It also has 3D printed parts on the front and rear lights to put a filter on to make them a little bit less bright on the eyes of road users. The front one has a yellow filter on just now and the back one doesn't yet have a filter, but I plan to use filters that will keep them the same colour, but just a little less sharp on the eyes.
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Bummer. UANs (unidentified abnormal noises) can be very hard to pinpoint.My next challenge is that it is has started making a high pitched whistling noise every half turn of the wheel.
I wondered if I could tell you about my continuing experiments, and ask a question about the kind of terrain where other people cycle?
I have realised that my bike with the big battery and the max power setting is great on steep hills, and against a headwind. It is also great on wide open roads, where I can chug along at 20mph for ten minutes or more. I wondered if that is the sort of thing that a lot of the riders on this thread are doing? I looked at their names on the left colum and realised that a lot of them are from places very far away from where I am, whose terriain I know nothing about.
Cyclists call these "false flats". Typically under 2% gradient, which means that the gravitational resistance or assistance is under 2% of gross weight.Most of my cycling is done in small narrow roads, with a lot of junctions. There are cars parked on both sides of the road, even right up to the junctions. The road space between the parked cars is wide enough for one car to pass, but narrow enough that I have to pull in to let a car pass. There is a constant stream of stop-start, 90 degree direction change, and gradient change from "slightly uphill" to "slightly downhill". To the casual observer, both of these gradients are "completely flat road".
Streets like that are pretty rare where I ride, even in the towns, and I avoid them whenever possible out of fear of someone opening a car door into my path.
Something's off here. Unless you're extemely weak, you shouldn't need big swings in assist level and gear on a string of false flats. I'd expect to ride the whole thing in one assist level and one or two adjacent gears without all that fuss.The thing I am finding is that when the road is slightly downhill I need to turn the motor off and go to gear 1. If the motor is on then it pushes too hard downhill. If the motor is off, the bike is too heavy to pedal in anything other than a really low gear.
Then if I go to the next little road, and the road is slightly uphill, then I need to turn the motor on because at this slow speed, I have no momentum to carry me and it is all down to the pedalling. Once I am going slightly uphill, I really need the motor in turbo mode to help with the weight of the bike. Once the motor is on, I need to go to gear 5 to even out the lurching of the powerful motor.
So I am constantly switching from [turbo + gear 5] to [motor off + gear 1].
No question, the greater the gross weight, the harder it is to accelerate, brake, and deviate from a straight path. This reduced responsiveness would your best argument for weight reduction in your flattish terrain.I think also at this slow speed, with the constant stopping and starting and constant changes of slope and direction, the weight of the battery stops being an advantage in providing momentum (as it does on a fast open road) and can be a bit of a liability. The extra weight just makes it harder for the bike to get moving from a standing start, and I can't find out how to set up the controls of the motor to enable it to start moving from a standing start without the lurching in response to the cadence of the pedals. The only way to do it seems to be this constant switching from [turbo + gear 5] to [motor off + gear 1].
Grateful every day to live in a place with so many fun and beautiful rides right from my door year round — and lots of good bike infrastructure to do it on. Drivers here are generally not mindful about dooring cyclists, but they're otherwise pretty good around bikes.That's amazing to know that that is where you live. I used to go on trips for work to San Diego and I used to fly over that area in a propeller aeroplane from the airport in Los Angeles. It's lovely to know that that is where you are. I can imagine that you must have some amazing views and nice wide roads and steep hills to cycle on there.
Q1. What's your speed and cadence through all of this?I tried the bike again today and I worked out that this is what I'm doing:
slight uphill = turbo + gear 5
slight downhill = motor off + gear 5
Starting from stationary = motor off and gear 1, rising rapidly to gear 5 again +/- turbo depending on slope.
This is a faff because in my commute I need to stop-start a lot and change gradient a lot for about the first 5 minutes. Maybe I will just get used to doing it after a while.
A lot of people think that, and on a cadence-sensing hub-drive that you can just throttle around or ghost-pedal without any real effort, it's largely true — providing you're willing to ride it that way.I'm really glad I got the bike with the clickey gears rather than the smooth gear shift, because I seem to be changing gears a huge amount. I didn't think I would need to use the gears on an electric bike at all.
So fairly low speed and a lot of stop and go in congested areas, and up to 20 mph on open road. And you want help starting out — presumably to get up to balancing speed as quickly as possible. Correct?Q1) I think my speed during this would be an absolute max of 9mph. I go at 16mph on the open road, but there isn't time or space to exceed 9mph in the small roads. The absolute legal speed limit on these roads is 20mph, and I often am reduced to driving at 10mph, because there just isn't space to speed up.
Not familiar with Bosch motors, but guessing that yours is well below max efficiency at 40 rpm cadence. That could contribute to your need for TURBO assist on slight grades.I have a feeling that my cadence is about 40rpm. I just imagined my legs pedalling and counted against my watch timer, and I think that's about right. I will check on the flow app tomorrow when it is light and I can turn the bike on.
I'll have to think about that.Q2) My motor options are Eco, Tour, Sport and Turbo. If I am on the up-hill flat road in sport at gear 3, the bike doesn't provide enough support to make up for the weight of the battery. The motor lurches with the turns of the pedal. If I go up to turbo, then there is enough support to propel the bike, and in gear 5, the lurching from the pedals is gone. I suppose if I am pedalling really slowly and pushing really hard, that does make sense, now I think about it.
No idea what that power setting (600 vs. 475) actually controls. What's it called?I am npow riding with the power turned down from 600 to 475. I tried that to simulate the effect of the smaller battery and it was good. When I turned up to 600 it was bad again, so today I turned down to 475. That was today and it was good again.