NwRecumbentRdr
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What's to most powerful FRONT hub motor you've ridden? How was the experience?
I only have 250 watts on my front hub drive kit bike, but I completely agree-- not only is cornering not a problem, but there are some really tight hairpins where the Trek handles better with the front hub than it did without. I think this is both due to balance and all-wheel drive.Cornering works just fine with a front hub, there are 1000s of them out there and folks aren't falling over all over the place. But big high powered front hubs are a whole different and dangerous animal.
Traction of a front tire (whether it's powered or not) is very important. Completely lose that traction on a bicycle, motorcycle or any other two wheeled vehicle and you will go down as soon as your center of gravity isn't directly over the wheel.
On a front hub ebike you need to think about that traction. It's not a setup that is well suited to loose surfaces so serious off road isn't an appropriate use case. On pavement, dirt roads, or groomed trails (small gravel) that aren't too steep a front hub works fine. Even in the rain, snow or ice with suitable tires there isn't a problem.
I ride a 500w front hub bike which is capable of over 1000w using the throttle (Grin Technologies RTR kit with a Shengyi hub motor) with solid front suspension in an urban/suburban environment 365 days a year. My bike is well balanced and very stable. It's tuned to bring on the power smoothly, and it rides very much like a traditional unpowered bike. The only thing I've done to accommodate the front hub setup is to run slightly wider tires than I would normally. In my case that would be 650x50mm gravel/adventure type tires to handle a variety of surfaces but biased towards smooth pavement. In the winter I switch to good aggressive and studded winter tires.
I do not agree, not at all. All of my bikes were mid-drives until I converted a Trek Pure flat foot frame. Lately converting the worn-out mid drives with MAC motors.its better than nothing.
Horse pucky!Powerful front hub motors are dangerous
I don't need to imagine. It corners just fine.Can you imagine cornering with front end power?
Well, I was thinking of this in the context of that noobie. And I think you misunderstood my recommendation, which I did not make crystal clear: I was not recommending a mid drive in the back. I was recommending a hub in the back. I'll edit my post to make more obvious.I do not agree, not at all. All of my bikes were mid-drives until I converted a Trek Pure flat foot frame. Lately converting the worn-out mid drives with MAC motors.
I just don't need the climbing ability.
A 1000W MXUS with a Grin controller and CA3. Super errand bike and the regen braking is great. Too often I think we tend to push our prejudices on n00bs. It's far and away better than nothing. Not everyone wants a build hobby.
I was recommending a hub in the back.
If given the choice between a hub kit in back vs. a hub kit in front, I would always pick the back wheel. You also have a MUCH lesser risk of destroying the front fork thanks to issues around torque arms and torque in general on the front forks. I have seen sooooo many destroyed forks where the dropouts have snapped because either the fork was not up to snuff or the builder didn't deal with the torque arm issue.
For a low power build, it doesn't make much difference front or rear. A 250w 40Nm motor can go on steel forks just fine with no torque arms or undue concern. My 500w/25a could probably be ok as well since I set the controller to slow-roll on the power. But I knew to do that. Again, I'm coming from seeing this as a weekly occurrence on the DIY Ebikes group, or on Endless Sphere, where some poor noob doesn't know what he is getting into, snaps off or rounds his dropouts and posts to the group asking wtf he's supposed to do now.
The second problem with rear hub motor is you cannot buy a 11 to 32 rear sprocket cluster in 7 speed... I need 32 to get up hills without power,