Picked up my Peak from REI on Friday and have ridden it 39 miles (3 trips) in an hot hilly residential neighborhoods in the San Fernando Valley. This is my second ebike the first being an old mountain bike that I installed a 36 volt geared rear hub motor currently with a 48 volt battery 12ah with a twist throttle. The old machine had none of cadence and torque sensors that the Peak has.
First thing I noticed on the Peak was how quiet the motor is and the smoothness of the ride. No more reason to avoid poorly paved streets and trying to drive around speed bumps. I do find that I need to shift gears a lot more frequently if I want the bike to operate efficiently. Disc brakes are a vast improvement over my old rim brakes requiring only moderate hand pressure to stop the bike quickly. The Peak handles more like a regular bike than my old mountain bike. The center of gravity of the Peak is lower which results in better cornering and balance. With all the built in sensors I feel I have better control over my pedaling contribution to the movement of the bike. I think I am getting more exercise with the Peak while moving at a slower speed because the controls on the Peak give me more accurate control over the contribution of the motor at any given time. With my old bike there was a tendency to peddle hard and just open up the throttle when the going got tough and continue repeating the process. Overall I am very pleased with the bike and have already added a rack, some lights (not hard wired), a mirror, holder for my phone and water bottle.
My wish list:
Well that's my wish list. Overall, I very much enjoy the bike and am happy with my choice and look forward to hearing what others have experienced. I very much appreciate everyone's contribution to this forum.
First thing I noticed on the Peak was how quiet the motor is and the smoothness of the ride. No more reason to avoid poorly paved streets and trying to drive around speed bumps. I do find that I need to shift gears a lot more frequently if I want the bike to operate efficiently. Disc brakes are a vast improvement over my old rim brakes requiring only moderate hand pressure to stop the bike quickly. The Peak handles more like a regular bike than my old mountain bike. The center of gravity of the Peak is lower which results in better cornering and balance. With all the built in sensors I feel I have better control over my pedaling contribution to the movement of the bike. I think I am getting more exercise with the Peak while moving at a slower speed because the controls on the Peak give me more accurate control over the contribution of the motor at any given time. With my old bike there was a tendency to peddle hard and just open up the throttle when the going got tough and continue repeating the process. Overall I am very pleased with the bike and have already added a rack, some lights (not hard wired), a mirror, holder for my phone and water bottle.
My wish list:
I do miss the throttle only mode; sometimes you just don't want to peddle (that's one of the reasons I purchased an electric bike!). I wish IZIP would offer a firmware upgrade. I am sure it just takes a little programing.
A bike like this should have a place for a water bottle.
It would be nice if the thumb shifter indicated what gear you are in. Under load shifting can be rough. (Though about installing a mirror on right handlebar so I could see what gear I was in!)
The 38t front chainring is too low for pedaling over 20 miles per hour. The Dash has 46t and same rear cassette. I would like to know if anyone knows where you can buy a slightly larger chainring that will work on this setup or install a smaller gear on the rear cassette.
My old bike had a cycle analyst which displayed among other things the wattage the motor was consuming and how many amp hours the battery had burned. Adding wattage to the display could easily be done and help the operator determine which gear is most efficient to use. Would like to know if anyone on this forum has added a watt meter to the Peak and how they did it.
Option to purchase larger battery instead of just buying a second battery. Or if Izip builds one in the future making it installable on the Peak or Dash.
Seat - I don't like the seat at all. It is too hard for my rear, but the saddle is personal, so I will just buy another.
Wires & cables at the handle bars - Overall the bike is nicely designed and presented, but the cable management in the front of the bike is horrible!
Right brake handle, throttle & thumb shifter - Izip should have done a better job of getting the three to align. I don't like the space between the throttle and right brake. This is a problem that I have when I build my own bike but expect the manufacture would pay attention to this detail.
A bike like this should have a place for a water bottle.
It would be nice if the thumb shifter indicated what gear you are in. Under load shifting can be rough. (Though about installing a mirror on right handlebar so I could see what gear I was in!)
The 38t front chainring is too low for pedaling over 20 miles per hour. The Dash has 46t and same rear cassette. I would like to know if anyone knows where you can buy a slightly larger chainring that will work on this setup or install a smaller gear on the rear cassette.
My old bike had a cycle analyst which displayed among other things the wattage the motor was consuming and how many amp hours the battery had burned. Adding wattage to the display could easily be done and help the operator determine which gear is most efficient to use. Would like to know if anyone on this forum has added a watt meter to the Peak and how they did it.
Option to purchase larger battery instead of just buying a second battery. Or if Izip builds one in the future making it installable on the Peak or Dash.
Seat - I don't like the seat at all. It is too hard for my rear, but the saddle is personal, so I will just buy another.
Wires & cables at the handle bars - Overall the bike is nicely designed and presented, but the cable management in the front of the bike is horrible!
Right brake handle, throttle & thumb shifter - Izip should have done a better job of getting the three to align. I don't like the space between the throttle and right brake. This is a problem that I have when I build my own bike but expect the manufacture would pay attention to this detail.
Well that's my wish list. Overall, I very much enjoy the bike and am happy with my choice and look forward to hearing what others have experienced. I very much appreciate everyone's contribution to this forum.
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