TIME FOR A NEW BIKE?
Two years in, with some 4,500 hilly island km on the clock - at least half over gravel roads and rough mountain trails - I'm considering selling my sole transportation and upgrading from my current Mariner to an even better folding fatbike. Yes, that's right. After my usual obsessive online research of the latest off-road ebikes, I have found only one model that can do everything the original Voltbike Mariner does – even better.
Yup. That's right. Considering price, proven capabilities and toothy-grin fun, I'm looking at... (drumroll please)... the new front-suspension Voltbike Mariner! Water-sealed controller box, improved high-continuous output controller, essential derailleur guard, better latches, the same superb Kendas, and those tree-root-absorbing, spring-loaded front forks make the new specs drool-worthy.
And yes, if Roger Racer is asking, I am a major fan of so-called "low end" components like Tektra disk brakes, those "agricultural" shift levers, and that Acera gear-changing thingy. Why? Because they stay in adjustment for years over brutal terrain and don't break. And that high-end battery? Over some 10 years of ebike and scooter riding from my hideout at the bottom of the cove's "gravity well", this is the first battery I've used of any type still delivering full power up that long steep hill after one year. Never mind two. And that's without charging it at 80% with the Satiator, which will significantly extend new battery life. Range remains 30+ km, peddling easy over hilly terrain.
What about repairs, you're asking. Over the equivalent of many years' city riding, I've replaced two drowned controllers (not difficult). The slowly disintegrating cadence sensor was recently exchanged for a much sturdier, snap-in upgrade - again at no cost. (Thanks, George!) About a 60-second job. And that kissable, life-preserving rear tire is finally worn enough to need changing. I'm now awaiting an instantly-shipped replacement set of internal planetary gears. I knew going in that those nylon gears in geared hub motors eventually fail. So becoming immobilized in the deep dark woods was a surprise. But not unexpected. Shouldn't be a problem to fix. (George has posted excellent step-by-step YouTubes for Voltbike controller and internal gears replacement).
This duffer is actually looking forward to the challenge. I need to learn how to dismount the rear tire and dismantle the motor, and I can do the new tire and derailleur guard installations at the same time. But why did those 8Fun gears fail so soon? P'raps from using the thumb throttle to start. Never, ever do that on the slightest incline. (Motor makes prolonged unhappy noises.)
Stay tuned for the next thrilling episode as I turn 70.
-Voltman