Yeah, that would be more like bikeglamping.A lot of it also depends on how you define "bikepacking". For me if you are sleeping someplace with convenient access to electrical outlets every night it probably isn't bikepacking.
My opinion: both range and charging time limitations of existing e-bikes really limit your options. Some otherwise appealing routes are just not feasible, and others would require rather contrived and unnatural itineraries in order to work around the range and charge time limitations. Outside of fairly short overnight trips I just don't see it.
A lot of it also depends on how you define "bikepacking". For me if you are sleeping someplace with convenient access to electrical outlets every night it probably isn't bikepacking. You can make plausible bicycle travel work in a lot of places with an e-bike, but I just don't see them for extended serious wilderness travel just yet.
The trip only starts when you get out of cell range.
There are lots of e-bikes out there where you can do many popular long-haul tours. That problem has already been solved. At this point in time someone has probably already ridden the Northern Tier, the Trans Am, and the Southern Tier routes across the States on an e-bike. Probably. All of those trips with some modification are doable with existing e-bikes.
What (probably) isn't doable with existing e-bikes is something like the GDMBR, the Oregon Outback, or the BC Trail. And without some fundamental changes in how we approach e-bikes they will continue to not be doable.
I too have a short list of shorter bikepacking trips that I am working down. What I've found is that even the shorter trips are at best awkward and usually impractical even with an e-bike with lots of legs and a willingness to hypermile as much as possible. What I mean by "awkward" is that you might either need to start with a full charge in the middle of nowhere in order to get around your range limitations or you might be forced to have a very short day in order to charge up for a long powerless section.
You need to keep in mind that riding on steep, rough roads while loaded down is probably the Worst Case Scenario for e-bike range. I find that even running 90+% of the time in Eco on my e-bike (with two 500wh Bosch Powerpacks) 60-odd miles and 6000-odd feet of elevation gain is an optimistic maximum range on logging roads and trails.
The newfangled Salsa e-bikes look promising as they are starting to check my boxes on what I'd want in an e-bike well-suited for bicycle travel, if not full on bikepacking.
I think the range concern for e bikepacking is much more of an Aussie or North American issue because in Europe it'll be mixed terrain mostly; small back roads to off road tracks but you're just never that far from somebody's house! The route planning though would still need to be more accurate, which could be a pain, in not being able to just pull up and pitch a tent. But watching riders youtube videos on the GDMBR they often stay in B&Bs or hostels or people's houses so with careful planning it might still be feasible.Yeah, true that. Weight, rough terrain and elevation are all enemies of range. I pretty much ride in eco on my Giant (which is 100% assist). Sometimes I ride with my local gravel club, and when I'm riding the ebike I tend to turn it down to 50% or 75% so I can get a workout. Running lower assist extends range considerably. I've assumed if I was doing an overnight I would want to turn down assist and do some local rides to get an idea of consumption rates. For the battery and also my legs.
Me too. Not even necessarily for bikepacking, but just for long gravel rides with the option for some overnighters.
LOL, shop queen indeed. The Load is even worse.I too have a short list of shorter bikepacking trips that I am working down. What I've found is that even the shorter trips are at best awkward and usually impractical even with an e-bike with lots of legs and a willingness to hypermile as much as possible. What I mean by "awkward" is that you might either need to start with a full charge in the middle of nowhere in order to get around your range limitations or you might be forced to have a very short day in order to charge up for a long powerless section.
You need to keep in mind that riding on steep, rough roads while loaded down is probably the Worst Case Scenario for e-bike range. I find that even running 90+% of the time in Eco on my e-bike (with two 500wh Bosch Powerpacks) 60-odd miles and 6000-odd feet of elevation gain is an optimistic maximum range on logging roads and trails.
I suspect (but do not know for sure) that if you used very outside-the-box controller algorithms to deliver pedal assist it might just be possible to build an e-bike with existing battery tech and an assisted range approaching 200 miles and 20k feet of elevation gain. But I also suspect that there would be diminishing returns on the weight and cost of the system as a whole that might make it all pointless.
Points well taken on the serviceability of e-bikes over the long term. I've noticed for a long time that my otherwise excellent Charger GX Rohloff is a shop queen compared to any acoustic bike I've owned.
The newfangled Salsa e-bikes look promising as they are starting to check my boxes on what I'd want in an e-bike well-suited for bicycle travel, if not full on bikepacking.