Tora Harris
Well-Known Member
Sounds like the 19" will work, you can see the chart below to help you decide.
(Link Removed - No Longer Exists)
(Link Removed - No Longer Exists)
Sounds like the 19" will work, you can see the chart below to help you decide.
(Link Removed - No Longer Exists)
I made a thread for this for the ODK - I'm assuming it's the same for the CC.@Tora Harris thanks again for being so responsive to all our Q's. On another Juiced-related thread you mentioned:
"We have been doing the range testing with the production spec CrossCurrent to get the real range figures. We attached the GPS and battery power meter (Cycle Analyst) so we can record the information."
I'm finally able to test ride a CC early this week. I very much appreciate what the Cycle Analyst makes possible for the curious rider and I'm wondering what one needs to do - assuming a store-bought CC - to hook up a CA. I gather the CC isn't CA-ready in the same sense installing the throttle assembly is...but is it 'compatible' with a CA, which is what the above statement hints at? And does Juiced have an install description available that will coach a new owner on how to hook up a CA? I've searched this lengthy thread and the Juiced Forum content but can't find the A to this Q. Many thanks!
Jack
If you can swing it...STromer is the gold standard other purpose built Ebikes are measured against. IMO.I test rode another CC today and this one felt faster than the first one I rode. The first CC I rode felt speed limited to ~20mph even though I had it on 'S' mode. I'm comparing it to the Stromer ST1 feels stronger but it costs twice as much (for an equivalent range battery) so I'm having trouble deciding which one to get.
Technically it should adjust longer with larger size, but we have them all the same for simplicity.Definitely 19" And after riding it awhile you might want to increase the handlebar stem by 20 to 30 mm..
@Tora Harris thanks again for being so responsive to all our Q's. On another Juiced-related thread you mentioned:
"We have been doing the range testing with the production spec CrossCurrent to get the real range figures. We attached the GPS and battery power meter (Cycle Analyst) so we can record the information."
I'm finally able to test ride a CC early this week. I very much appreciate what the Cycle Analyst makes possible for the curious rider and I'm wondering what one needs to do - assuming a store-bought CC - to hook up a CA. I gather the CC isn't CA-ready in the same sense installing the throttle assembly is...but is it 'compatible' with a CA, which is what the above statement hints at? And does Juiced have an install description available that will coach a new owner on how to hook up a CA? I've searched this lengthy thread and the Juiced Forum content but can't find the A to this Q. Many thanks!
Jack
@Rindy , congratulations on your new CrossCurrent! As you might recognize from the length of this thread, there is much interest in learning more about the CrossCurrent. So I hope you post more comments about how you are using your specific bike and how it's performing. Battery/range performance, how it copes with the various road/trail surfaces, the custom-programmed motor's performance and its general build quality would, I think, be of special interest to the group. No doubt more formal, published reviews will begin to appear but, for now, you 'first buyers' are the experts!
That's more common of the LED type displays and not so much with LCD. The LED on my ProdecoTech will drop under load and bounce back at rest. Makes it much more difficult to judge where the state of charge is. My Easy Motion, with LCD doesn't bounce under load or rest. That's also true of most LCD ebikes I've ridden. You will in time learn how your system responds at various charge levels and be able to get close on the state of charge.as the battery level indicator tends to fluctuate as you change assistance, speed, terrain, etc. I would imagine that is a commonality among all e bikes with the battery level fluctuation.
Thanks for your inputs. Yes the LED on the pack we have less control over the mapping. In general those kind of LED lights are insanely overzealous. We need to drill down to the supplier of that voltage board to solve that. We spec it "monitor only" when you push the momentary button because the lights we found to slowly drain the pack when left on. Same with the USB which was unfortunately deactivated. It is all done to up the reliability of the packs, but the tooling Reention did already so you end up with a "dummy" USB port that actually cost more to remove.There's also the 4 LED's on the battery. I don't know if they fluctuate since you have to press the button to view them. Also too bad the USB port on it is non functional. I just noticed the assist sort of dying today at around 30 miles out of a 33 mile roundtrip commute using mostly assist lvl 3 & a bit of sport mode. With the cyclocomputer set to 700c x 45 wheel it shows an avg speed of 18.5mph a 3mph improvement over my Ohm 350w Bionx. I've turned to fixing my dished off center front wheel myself hopefully that holds up since I just did it by eye.
My CC has the standard 7.8 Amp-Hour battery.Rindy - which size battery does your bike have?