macdude22
New Member
She's still right about the OMG-cost of e-bikes -and I wish it was only e-bikes, BTW.
tbf I've lost 20 pounds so will probably make up the cost in lowered healthcare costs.
She's still right about the OMG-cost of e-bikes -and I wish it was only e-bikes, BTW.
When we rented the ebikes the guy said one was a 500 watt nominal motor with a 750 peak wattage.
So it got me thinking when you see a 750 watt motor spec is that a 500W motor peaking at 750?
If it specs 750W what are you really getting?
Well I rode two today. Started with the Trek PowerFly 5. Should not have started at that price point of 4K!
It was PAS only but for my fist time on an Ebike I came back like a kid at Christmas! Grinning from ear-to-ear!
Then my Anti-E son and I rented two bikes for an hour. I got on a beatup Fat Cat with a 350W motor fat tire.
Again, kid in a candy store even on this bike. It would not pull me up much of hill without assist.
We rode for an hour and I found myself turning down the PAS more and more and still having a great time!
So this solidified two things...1. definetly want a fat tire, I didn't feel like it rolled any harder etc. Loved the fat tire.
2. I want the 750 watt motor. My kid was on a 500w 750 peak(question about that later).
And the Fat Cat was kinda of different, front hub drive, but it kinda of leads me to believe if you do a little research you probably can't go wrong with a bike like Radrover or M2s since they are all basically the same components.
AND my Anti-E kid was shocked! He loved em too!
So on say a RadRover if you get a 750W motor is that nominal or peak?
All good points.. And I think what is going to put me over the top for Rad is I can rent/ride one.I think at some point you just need to make a leap of faith.
I'm not sure if it was here or somewhere else, but I mentioned that a very good plan when looking at something with a price point like this, is to buy one, assemble it carefully, and ride the heck out of it for at least a month to learn what you can do. Give yourself some time to get used to the bike! There IS a learning curve.
Then fix whatever you aren't happy with.
In the case of the stock motor, if it doesn't do the job for you, there's that kit, there's the bigger motor (the real 750w), and there's an even bigger motor. Even with the price of that kit, and a bigger motor, you're still going to have a pretty reasonably priced bike that's going to be able to hang right in there with bikes costing several times as much when it comes to speed.