I am starting to look into conversion options - but I am a bit wary having never done any "bike mechanic" work, and I don't want to take on a big project that gets between us and being able to enjoy our bikes.
Given enough time I'm sure I'd be able, and would enjoy the process. But instant gratification is very appealing too, and spare time is lacking.
As for the ATV's.... It is true that a LOT of RVers seem to copy what we do and buy what we buy.... But I don't think a lot of the ATV crowd are typically our audience. But, hmmm, maybe. Fewer loud ATV's around would be great!
- Chris
Chris,
You seem to have two choices. The first is simple, and it is the 20 inch wheel. There are many competitors, the prices are fine, no need to build. I don't know if you rode that Mariner in Santa Fe. The overall experience with a 20 inch wheel won't vary too much. I'm thinking in terms of rocky areas or areas of loose dirt. If you think the 20 inch will handle that, there isn't too much to do but find the model you want, based on capacity, sizing, the battery size, and the throttle/pedal assist issues. There are other things and there are also ways to customize the bike, even the tires.
The 24 or 26 inch folder seems to come down to the Tern and the Montague stuff. I don't know if these even fit in your space. If so, there are several ways to convert them. There are two types of motors. One type is built into the wheel. The other type goes where the pedal mechanism goes, the bottom bracket.
For kits, the degree of difficulty can vary. They sell front hub motors on the basis that you take off the existing wheel, change out the tire and tube to the motorized wheel, then install the new wheel. Just slide it in. Front hubs should be reinforced, so that is an extra step. You may have to adjust the brake mounts. There are similar issues on a rear install, plus the cluster of sprockets has to be replaced. I haven't done the rear hub.
If you go with a mid-drive, and replace the bottom bracket, the hard part is getting the existing structure out. But any competent shop has the tools and they can just remove what is there. At that point, you are really looking at one choice, the Bafang BBS series. In theory, it slides into the bottom bracket and you tighten it down. There are tons of videos on YouTube showing how this is done.
If you want to do something like this you have several choices. If you are in Arizona, you could get the installation done by Lectric Cycles. You could ask
@Chris Head if he has done an installation on the Tern or Montague, how it might work out. LC is a premium, full service vendor. They will do the whole installation, if that is what you want, assuming it can be done. LC will sell you a battery with a nice mount. Since the controller on the BBS series is inside the motor, there are two basic things to mount, plus a display, motor cut-off gadgets, a throttle. Most of this is wire management and getting things right on the handlebars. Lectric Cycles is headquartered in Tempe, I believe.
The discount option is dealing with a company like EM3ev or LunaCycle. They will sell you a motor and a battery in a package. A lot would depend on how you could mount the battery. There are bags that mount on the top tube, or bags/baskets that mount in front, often with Velcro. If you have the motor you can get the bottom bracket cleared at any shop, and go from there. It's not much work. People sometimes have to scrub the bottom bracket, work it a bit. Other than that, you might just look at the instruction videos, maybe follow along.
You may find fender kits. Not sure. You can't do this if you can't fit the Tern Joe or Montague Paratrooper in your space. If you can't, then look at the 20 inch bikes and try to simulate the terrain you would be riding over.
It's disappointing that this won't start to limit the ATV population in the deserts, but what can you do? Ebikes are pretty low impact, but very satisfying. Just match what you need to do, if you can.
I noticed Court was asked a question about folders and mid-drives here (comments):
http://electricbikereview.com/e-rad/350-watt-mid-drive-conversion-kit/