I've got a little experience with this
. I've done the awd thing and the super heavyweight cargo thing.
I like to build top-quality-component ebikes from the frame up. Quite a few of them are dual motor or AWD or 2WD or whatever you want to call them. Why would you build an AWD ebike?
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I can tell you without hesitation your best motor choice will be a BBSHD in the back and a fat hub in the front. the problem with that is there are no fat front hubs available on the market at this time (If you find one, please let me know). In fact I just went a few rounds with a Chinese seller who was advertising 135mm Bafang G060's (the gold standard) and it turns out they are out of stock, likely never had them in the first place.
When looking into carrying serious weight, you need to realize what you are getting into. Myself personally, with a heavily modified Surly Big Fat Dummy (super strong custom wheels, BBSHD, custom wideloaders) I have crossed 565 lbs in total system weight. The issue is balance. Put 120+ lbs even low on wideloaders that are perfectly balanced and you are essentially in for the ride of your life at 5-8 mph, and even with the best brakes, your challenge when slowing is not about stopping, its about the risk of losing your delicate balancing act and crashing over. When a 500 lb bike falls over, stuff breaks.
Only one kind of cargo bike - other than a tricycle which is sub optimal for bikepacking - can handle these kinds of loads without balance issues - a frontloader.
I never planned on building three different classes of cargo bike, but I did. What are their strengths and weaknesses?
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And a frontloader is not ideal for bikepacking, either.
I presently have my Surly BFD set up for overland riding in the Lower Sierras - where I am in the forest or running along mostly granite mountainsides - no actual trails. The bike use in that environment is wood gathering. So I can get it pretty heavy, but its not any 200 lbs of cargo heavy. A BFD or a Salsa Blackborow are the two production bikes you want to look into for this kind of work and guess what? Both are out of production. Blackborow's are unicorns, but if you Join the Surly Big Dummy and Big Fat Dummy group on Facebook you can find them on sale used.
There are no pics of it set up like this, but I now have a 36T front chainring to go with the 11S rear setup. If I were starting over (the SRAM 11S group with CSMS7 steel cluster is plenty strong) I would use either a Box 2 9 spd with a Microshift Advent 46T steel cluster, or if that cluster won't work with the Box derailleur (which is a beauty) do the full Microshift Advent transmission group. Bear in mind a bike like this will need a lot of chain (I am at 210 links IIRC) and you really REALLY want to use a proper badass ebike chain. As in go ahead and break the bank and get a KMC e9. However the SRAM EX1 has 144 links and even though it is a 10s it should work on a 9s drivetrain - it was specified by SRAM for their EX1 drivetrain which I have on my enduro. Why do I mention this? They are only about $25 each. I am doing the Advent upgrade on my mid tail maybe as soon as tomorrow and I can't find e9's closer than the UK so I have a couple of the SRAM chains and we'll see how they do.
Prologue (you are here)Episode 1: 138L (each) Panniers… Seriously?!Episode 2: Big Fat Dumb WideloadersEpisode 3: Kickstand KaosEpisode 4: Add a Flight Deck. And a HangarEpisode 5: LeftoversEp…
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Beyond those choices we're talking custom frame, I think.
or do a trailer to get around the balance issue.