AvalancheRun
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
It’s well past time you were banned. Almost every day you contribute pure negativity.Give it up man this jackass is stroking for response.
It got me too.
I'm out of hea.
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It’s well past time you were banned. Almost every day you contribute pure negativity.Give it up man this jackass is stroking for response.
It got me too.
I'm out of hea.
wondered when you would chime in,your riding style and experience would make your advice most appropriate,i get the impression that the universal problem is at play here as well( money),if her range wasnt that great i would recommend a "camel" style step through, believe it or not an ecotric"peacedove would check a lot of boxes for her,disadvantages abound,however it is a dutch style semi cargo bike,one disadvantage would be weight and low quality components,range( always range) weight is subjective,due to her diminutive stature any bike will fast approach a fair percentage of her body weight,i was pleasantly surprised at how much difference even a cheap rear suspension bike felt on the ride department,perhaps she could consider a light weight bike booster? expectations,expectations- lower the requirement a bit suddenly a whole new galaxy of options exist,trial and error is probably going to be her champion( i am out of vados,perhaps i need some more) anyway good luck to her on her quest for her"grail".Try a Specialized A Vado?
ah! youth is wasted on the young.I like to be able to flat foot sometimes while stopped. I had one of those semi-recumbent style ebikes (E-Lux Malibu GT) and while I could flat foot at a stop I started to really hate the longer wheelbase. Combined with the front shock forks and the suspension post it was horrible over bumps as well, again, because of the length. I might try a button activated dropper post on my next ebike. Drop at a stop and press the button to raise while standing during take-off.
Speaking of semi-bent recumbent bikes, the most comfortable bicycle I ever owned was a Rans Fusion. It did pretty much everything well except climb. I sold it when I moved to PA and still miss that analog bicycle sometimes. Fast, easy on my wrist, never any butt pain. I replaced it with a normal road bike and could do a century before my wrist would start hurting so I never hunted down another Rans. Note I was MUCH younger in those days!
yep nice is an act for some people,it reminds me of the shallow Christians that do good just to avoid hell. i am an "urushiol" veteran when young i would catch that stuff so bad( blood blisters,no sleep) if i was lucky i got to see the ocal"sawbones" and get the cortisone,deltasone and aristacourt treatment( by the seventh day felt much better)(hit that stuff with hot water-what a rush!) finally started being proactive, avoid if possible,wash with cold water and laundry detergent,the one thing that actually seemed to dry up mild cases on me was "afterbite"( the kind with ammonia and mink oil) finally after the afterbite was unavailable just started using household ammonia,the one antihistamine(not available these days) that seemed to work best was"dimetane" ( no medical advice offered here!) one time my face swelled up so much looked like i had the mumps. the medical establishment sez" you"immune" people do not get smug,one day you will stroll through a patch of poison ivy kicking plants and end up in the hospital.if you ever wonder why the armored japanese warriors were so fierce,it probably had to do with the incredible dermatitis some contracted when wearing the "japaned" armor( treated with urushiol oil)I've liked yogurt in the past and intend to try it again, now that sour cream tastes so good.
My sister and her husband have considered themselves organic farmers about 45 years. Mostly, they like the holier-than-thou pose, but it's also for a tax break. The market for organic food will let them sell just enough to have their land taxed at the farm rate.
A few years ago they asked me to milk their goats for five days while they were away. After the first day, I realized my arms had been exposed to poison ivy. Washing is normally adequate. After the second day, it was worse. I washed again. The fourth day I finally realized why it kept getting worse. Just before leaving, they'd opened a pasture covered with poison ivy. They'd lie on the oozing stems and get their undersides covered with the invisible oil. Skin oil is a barrier, so if you wash, you will be more vulnerable if exposed the next day.
They knew enough about milking goats and poison ivy that it couldn't have been an oversight. It's the kind of trick they find amusing.
By the fifth day, the swelling was so bad that I couldn't close my fingers on a spoon to eat. One neighbor said it was the worst case of poison ivy he'd ever seen. I needed Benadryl but could not drive to a store or make a purchase. Another neighbor said he was driving to a nearby store on an errand. I asked him to get some Benadryl so I could use my hands. He was always asking my help and always acted like a nice guy, but he refused as if it were perfectly respectable. Often, being nice is role playing. My need didn't register because he really didn't care.
Somebody else got the Benadryl. I managed to get two capsules out, pick up a cup, and turn on the tap. The antihistamine made a big difference.
I haven't drunk any goat milk since.
Kevin, I'm a bit confused. By "her" do you mean me? I think it sounds like it. Please clarify what you mean by "camel it". and what a "light weight bike booster" is. Since Mike V's reply suggesting adding a motor to a bike I already have I've really been trying to figure out if I could add the motor he suggests to my Trek 200 hybrid. (post with a question above somewhere regarding this). I just need to figure out if the grip shifters could be changed out to a short throw trigger shifters for the 3 x 7 altus derailleurs. So far, no one has helped me on that except for a suggestion about a possible electronic shifter ? I've been talking about that with my engineer son (who questions the reliability of a Chinese motor), and I would have to find someone to put the bike together, no shops nearby and the only traveling bike mechanic has never worked on electric .wondered when you would chime in,your riding style and experience would make your advice most appropriate,i get the impression that the universal problem is at play here as well( money),if her range wasnt that great i would recommend a "camel" style step through, believe it or not an ecotric"peacedove would check a lot of boxes for her,disadvantages abound,however it is a dutch style semi cargo bike,one disadvantage would be weight and low quality components,range( always range) weight is subjective,due to her diminutive stature any bike will fast approach a fair percentage of her body weight,i was pleasantly surprised at how much difference even a cheap rear suspension bike felt on the ride department,perhaps she could consider a light weight bike booster? expectations,expectations- lower the requirement a bit suddenly a whole new galaxy of options exist,trial and error is probably going to be her champion( i am out of vados,perhaps i need some more) anyway good luck to her on her quest for her"grail".
BTW, I learned from similar episodes, and now an allergic dermatitis to Mugwort that is even worse, that Technu, the original, applied after exposure as instructed, will remove the oils from your skin and prevent (if done soon enough) or significantly lessen, the reaction. I swear by it. Some call it pricey but one bottle lasts me a whole season and I use it often. Even if you do break out it still helps lessen the reaction. Get it!yep nice is an act for some people,it reminds me of the shallow Christians that do good just to avoid hell. i am an "urushiol" veteran when young i would catch that stuff so bad( blood blisters,no sleep) if i was lucky i got to see the ocal"sawbones" and get the cortisone,deltasone and aristacourt treatment( by the seventh day felt much better)(hit that stuff with hot water-what a rush!) finally started being proactive, avoid if possible,wash with cold water and laundry detergent,the one thing that actually seemed to dry up mild cases on me was "afterbite"( the kind with ammonia and mink oil) finally after the afterbite was unavailable just started using household ammonia,the one antihistamine(not available these days) that seemed to work best was"dimetane" ( no medical advice offered here!) one time my face swelled up so much looked like i had the mumps. the medical establishment sez" you"immune" people do not get smug,one day you will stroll through a patch of poison ivy kicking plants and end up in the hospital.if you ever wonder why the armored japanese warriors were so fierce,it probably had to do with the incredible dermatitis some contracted when wearing the "japaned" armor( treated with urushiol oil)
All the bike motors are Chinese even bosch. Mahle is swiss but at 250 watts is fairly useless. Mahle quit selling conversion kits in 2018, mahle now comes only with bikes. I got 4500 miles out of a 1300 w ebikeling geared hub (gears wore out), burned the wire harness off a Mac in the rain due to the pins being too close together on an ASI controller, and found 36 v 350 w bafangs were too small to lift 330 lb up 12% grades (burnt the winding by over-volting). Have replaced the harness on the Mac12t and am using it again. Don't every buy an ASI controller except for desert racing. ASI came in a kit with the Mac12t from luna. The first ebikeling controller lasted 4 year before erroring out, the 2nd 500 watt controller was fine for the 350 w bafang but errored on the 1000 w bafang, and am now on a 2nd 1000 w controller from ebay. I've been through 4 throttles and 3 PAS pickups. I keep spares in the garage so I am not immobile when something fails. I bought the bodaboda bike in the avatar unpowered, then added ebikeling kit with lunabike battery 10000 miles & 5 years ago. 25 mph wind in my face can make my 27 mile commute take 6 hours without power. Best motor for carrying cargo on hills is mac12t 48 v but you have to buy them from alibaba now, no US vendor will stock them. 2.5 mm spokes that fit motors have to come from china now too, I buy them from ebay. Used to you could buy a good motor in a wheel built up. Now it is bafang bafang bafang bafang, no matter that 10 winding motors are great for top speed but wimpy climbing hills with groceries. ]I've been talking about that with my engineer son (who questions the reliability of a Chinese motor), and I would have to find someone to put the bike together, no shops nearby and the only traveling bike mechanic has never worked on electric .
Wrong.All the bike motors are Chinese even bosch.
Plus suspension forks tend to have a longer axle-to-crown for a double whammy on that score. Although if a step thru frame is in play, standover might never be an issue.In general, bikes with suspension forks have taller stack heights, so that’s something the OP needs to consider if having standover clearance issues.
most all of us seek a "grail" one time or the other in our lives,the young often seek "rainbows",the elderly purpose and justification-the lightweight system would be a " quirol" a very good bike mechanic could probably modify the shifters to your liking( maybe you need a trike with a cvt? camel refers to the swooping style of city type step thru bikes,i never did like v style step thru always seemed cramped my left leg suffers a paralysis that ebbs and flows(somedays a bit better,somedays worse,got tired of getting tangled up with the top bar and face planting. we are all mortal creatures and like the apostle paul we need to find the contentment in any situation. i would hope a nice bike builder like some that dwell here would take you under their wing and create a solution for your woes as the gov't person said[ we are here to help] i wouldnt question the reliability of good chinese motors "ebikes ca" can certainly set you up with a motor that would keep on ticking.Kevin, I'm a bit confused. By "her" do you mean me? I think it sounds like it. Please clarify what you mean by "camel it". and what a "light weight bike booster" is. Since Mike V's reply suggesting adding a motor to a bike I already have I've really been trying to figure out if I could add the motor he suggests to my Trek 200 hybrid. (post with a question above somewhere regarding this). I just need to figure out if the grip shifters could be changed out to a short throw trigger shifters for the 3 x 7 altus derailleurs. So far, no one has helped me on that except for a suggestion about a possible electronic shifter ? I've been talking about that with my engineer son (who questions the reliability of a Chinese motor), and I would have to find someone to put the bike together, no shops nearby and the only traveling bike mechanic has never worked on electric .
I didn't think I was looking for a "grail", just a bike with shifters that my hands can use and a weight that's reasonable, ie. not too far above 50#. My Trek 520 meets those needs with bar-end shifters but has really narrow tires, the Trek 200 just needs different shifters.
experience leads! this guy has been there and done that,his advice with some others is golden,the divers range of suggestion will surely do some good!A couple of observations from a cargo biker and someone who builds ebikes in general frame-up, who also has a lifelong cycling background:
1. Suspension forks on cargo bikes are generally considered undesirable. The reason is the weight on the bike when loaded. You get both compression at rest, and some instability with the extra weight. Spending a bundle on finding just the right suspension fork can eliminate the issue (for me it was a Wren Inverted) but generally its a whole lot easier to find alternatives to a suspension fork. In particular I make good use of the Kinekt suspension stem, with the upgrades of a super heavy spring (so you can never bottom it) and their bumper upgrade. Couple that to bars that position my wrists at a more natural angle, shod with thick silicone grips (Wolftooth Fat Paw in particular) and the improvement is dramatic (I have issues with severe wrist pain after getting hit by a car a few years ago). Next, throw in a wide rim with the biggest tire you can fit. A 20" Stranger Crux XL has a 35mm internal width and with the right fork, can easily fit a 20x3.0 tire inflated to only 20 psi. That feels like riding on a pillow compared to a 2.0" tire and because of the increased air volume, 20 psi is sufficient both for ride comfort and cargo loads on dirt.
View attachment 175813
Speaking of which, a 2.40" Maxxis Minion will, thanks to its relatively supple casing and knobs, be a really REALLY good cargo tire and get you through quite a range of terrain, including pavement, comfortably. Just keep it aired to 45 psi and not the 65 its rated up to.
View attachment 175815
2. I know the outsider's view on the reliability of Chinese products is understandably jaundiced, but bear in mind the Chinese ebike market is literally an order of magnitude larger than the rest of the world combined. Further, Chinese bike riders tend to be utility oriented, and lower income, so they prize economy and reliability. What you end up with from Chinese manufacturers tends to be not-sexy but also highly reliable and long-lived. Effective blunt instruments, if you will. I would not extend that rosy assessment to anything else used in the domestic Chinese bicycle/ebike market.
@BurroBabe Your physical requirements coupled to your cycling needs are, to all intents and purposes, forcing you into a 20" platform ... whether you're ready to give in and agree to this yet or not. You are just not going to find a motorized 700C touring bike with a Blackburn rack in the back and low riders up front. Even if you try building it. (speaking of which, you could do that with an older touring bike frame and a BBS02 motor, where you dial the amps back on that '02 to account for lesser frame strength). Your range requirements coupled to your terrain are putting you right at the outside edge of what is do-able on a production bike, without carrying a spare battery along (bearing in mind EVERYONE who sells ebikes is lying like a rug when it comes to range estimates).
Something has to give here. Really, more than one something I think because to get the range you need you'll have to cave on the light weight requirement and use a nice big brick of a battery. My Bullitt has a 35ah pack built into a box under the cargo floor and that gets me into the kind of range you are asking for (I am assuming mostly downhill one way but uphill on the other, so you really don't need a full powered 70 mile range).
good always looking for things that really work,thanks.BTW, I learned from similar episodes, and now an allergic dermatitis to Mugwort that is even worse, that Technu, the original, applied after exposure as instructed, will remove the oils from your skin and prevent (if done soon enough) or significantly lessen, the reaction. I swear by it. Some call it pricey but one bottle lasts me a whole season and I use it often. Even if you do break out it still helps lessen the reaction. Get it!