JRA
Well-Known Member
So much chatter about light eBikes that I personally feel is an oxymoron at least according to my needs. Sure as light a bike as possible has many attributes in the push bike marketplace that has ruled for years but eBikes, while in the same family, are the country cousins who shouldn't be afraid to dose on some biscuits and gravy. Cheap, light and strong as KB once sagely said.
The reason I ride an eBike is that I find it to be a great way to get there and back while getting exercise and not having anxiety if I will make it where I want and back again due to a too small battery and at a speed that is greater than I can normally being an active cyclist type for years.
So to that end I don't mind some pork aboard to get to my goals. I still try and not go overboard as I appreciate a bike that handles as it should and too much weight, especially if not distributed evenly, combined with the wrong components can get ugly.
I have stuff like CK hubs and headset, Ti seatpost, Carbon Fiber front sus fork and Carbon Fiber rims on my steel hardtail eMTB and that is just a carry over from before I put the motor kit on it. It weighs differently as all my bikes do depending on what Ah battery I have on board. Battery not included it weighs 35lbs,. With the 12ah 2170 aboard it weighs 43lbs. It can be a bit of a struggle to get over a log, fence or gate when necessary but doable and done many times. Certainly easier than a moto!
My one road bike is a steel Bikes Direct drop bar/45c tire type and used primarily on secondary pavé and dirt roads with some interesting forays on to sand and single track which is aided by the larger tires run at low 30 psi. It has a 9c front hub motor and no specific lightweight components which is fairly heavy and weighs 42lbs. sans battery. I use a 15ah battery on it mainly which brings it up to 51.98 lbs. loaded for the road.
My El Cheapo CL drop bar aluminum Specialized with the Grin Any Axle front hub motor, a much lighter DD motor than the 9c but the same watt rating, wide rims and 45c tires used to weigh 43.3lbs. with the battery but it is being canablized currently to shift the necessary components onto another platform, steel again, so it will probably weigh more especially as I anticipate using my new 18ah 2170 battery on it.
Both drop bar bikes are capable of 1000w output 48v/20A-52v/20A, but rarely run at that. eMTB is 864w peak but once again that sees little use except for when necessary. I have the option to raise the A rating to 25A but never have seen the need. Plus it is ok legally to have a 1000w bike where I live. As an aside I have around $2k in each of my bikes so DIY is definitely a low cost alternative for those that have some knowhow.
For fun and fitness it is hard to beat an eBike. But adding a motor and battery to a bicycle is never going to be lightweight so why fight it? Want better wh/mi? Use less assist and pedal harder. Don't care as much about that aspect and want range/speed then you will need a heavier bike but the added weight should more than make up for itself.
The reason I ride an eBike is that I find it to be a great way to get there and back while getting exercise and not having anxiety if I will make it where I want and back again due to a too small battery and at a speed that is greater than I can normally being an active cyclist type for years.
So to that end I don't mind some pork aboard to get to my goals. I still try and not go overboard as I appreciate a bike that handles as it should and too much weight, especially if not distributed evenly, combined with the wrong components can get ugly.
I have stuff like CK hubs and headset, Ti seatpost, Carbon Fiber front sus fork and Carbon Fiber rims on my steel hardtail eMTB and that is just a carry over from before I put the motor kit on it. It weighs differently as all my bikes do depending on what Ah battery I have on board. Battery not included it weighs 35lbs,. With the 12ah 2170 aboard it weighs 43lbs. It can be a bit of a struggle to get over a log, fence or gate when necessary but doable and done many times. Certainly easier than a moto!
My one road bike is a steel Bikes Direct drop bar/45c tire type and used primarily on secondary pavé and dirt roads with some interesting forays on to sand and single track which is aided by the larger tires run at low 30 psi. It has a 9c front hub motor and no specific lightweight components which is fairly heavy and weighs 42lbs. sans battery. I use a 15ah battery on it mainly which brings it up to 51.98 lbs. loaded for the road.
My El Cheapo CL drop bar aluminum Specialized with the Grin Any Axle front hub motor, a much lighter DD motor than the 9c but the same watt rating, wide rims and 45c tires used to weigh 43.3lbs. with the battery but it is being canablized currently to shift the necessary components onto another platform, steel again, so it will probably weigh more especially as I anticipate using my new 18ah 2170 battery on it.
Both drop bar bikes are capable of 1000w output 48v/20A-52v/20A, but rarely run at that. eMTB is 864w peak but once again that sees little use except for when necessary. I have the option to raise the A rating to 25A but never have seen the need. Plus it is ok legally to have a 1000w bike where I live. As an aside I have around $2k in each of my bikes so DIY is definitely a low cost alternative for those that have some knowhow.
For fun and fitness it is hard to beat an eBike. But adding a motor and battery to a bicycle is never going to be lightweight so why fight it? Want better wh/mi? Use less assist and pedal harder. Don't care as much about that aspect and want range/speed then you will need a heavier bike but the added weight should more than make up for itself.