Catalyzt
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
That is yet another really sweet ride, Pedal! How much does it weigh? Estimated weight without the rear rack and fenders?This is the bike that I use for what are for me 'longer rides.' It has a bar that allows for changing positions to prevent fatigue. The saddle has gel and ventilation. It can be ridden clipped in or un-clipped with double sided pedals. It has low rolling resistance tires that can take broken pavement or trails and it has an air fork. It can hold a second battery if I want, but I have found that it is more advantageous to get rid of the added weight of a second battery. The rural roads around here are very rough. That is why this bike is beefy. Three hours of rough roads is good enough for me.
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That would probably almost work here. By Griffith Park standards, that would be a 'rough' not a 'very rough' road... IMHO, 'very rough' means deeper potholes that have not been patched, often hidden in deep shadows, more loose gravel, and blowing piles of fine, slippery dirt that blow around to unexpected places. But I bet if I slapped straight bars & hydraulic brakes on something like that, and if it could accommodate a 2.2 (ish) tire, and a serious suspension seatpost (RedShift or similar), that could handle about anything I ride... probably a bit more unstable on some of the steep descents, but entirely workable.
For me, my range currently is easy to remember: With my 418Wh battery, a little better than 40 miles with 4,000 feet of vertical... call it 42 and 4,200. I think what I actually did was 36 miles with 4,300 of vertical, and still had an estimated 12 miles of range.
I wonder how your bike would do uphill on Brand Park Motorway-- plenty of 8-14% with very short little sections of 18-22%. My issue now is that while I can get to the top of the ridge, and even to Verdugo Peak, I'm getting home from the ride with only 8 miles of range, and I'd love to explore further up there. I know that I can probably go a ways past Verdugo Peak and return, or even return from Verdugo Peak and add part of Las Flores Motorway... but not the whole loop.
It I took a ride that kissed 40 miles, I'd have a bug-out plan: If I was running low on watts, I'd probably arrange for my wife to meet me at a brew-pub on the way home with my charger, eat a lazy dinner outside as I recharged, and then be good for the last 8 miles, which includes about 800 feet of climbing right at the end.
Without all that vertical, I'm sure this battery could do 60 miles or better.
That is with a lot of human watts as part of the equation. And Stefan, on a bike like mine, I automatically shut off the battery during descents and even long flat segments if I have a lot of momentum... I think passive drain is very minimal, but why not? The switch is right below my thumb.