I just scored a deal on a Jamis DXT A3 and my plan is to put fenders, rack and a Bafang BBS02 on for my daily commute. Advice is welcome on batteries and such.
Thanks in advance!
Thanks in advance!
Thanks! I am a newb at this, I know the motor gets tucked up there and was wondering if the cable would be in the way.Those internal cable will stay the same , no modification needed. The new cables for the motor and accessories will need to be routed outside of the frame and tied down with zip ties.
I see, for the mid drive install you should have enough clearance between the motor and the frame for the cables to pass through.Thanks! I am a newb at this, I know the motor gets tucked up there and was wondering if the cable would be in the way.
Good to know thank you! My next concern is the brake levers because it is integrated with the trigger shifter, I understand that the left side will be replaced because of the single chainring but I am wondering about the right one?I see, for the mid drive install you should have enough clearance between the motor and the frame for the cables to pass through.
You can keep your brake lever and add an ebrake motor power cutoff sensor like this or this.Good to know thank you! My next concern is the brake levers because it is integrated with the trigger shifter, I understand that the left side will be replaced because of the single chainring but I am wondering about the right one?
So I would not need the ebrake cutoff levers that come with the kit then? Never mind I get it now inline brake sensor.
NoSo I would not need the ebrake cutoff levers that come with the kit then?
I think once you do the mid drive you wont want to ride the hub anymore. I used to have a Lectric xp and a Ride1up core 5. I am building my perfect commuter now.I'm looking at the same kit right now for a 2018 Specialized Crosstrail Sport Disc conversion. Should be a fun project for 2021. I already have a folding electric bike with a 500w rear hub drive. So, it will be interesting to see how the two bikes compare when this one is done. My Blix Vika+ tops out at 25 mph and the 48v battery lasts about 25 miles the way I ride.
Luckily, I used to ride road bikes a few years ago and when upgrading that bike's gearset I bought a stand and all the tools needed for a project like this.
I'm have lots of questions about this. I find myself going back and forth over the two styles and I'm thinking I may be more of a "throttle Junkie" rider.I think once you do the mid drive you wont want to ride the hub anymore. I used to have a Lectric xp and a Ride1up core 5. I am building my perfect commuter now.
Actually it's the mid drives that require shifting, unless you have a single gear power train.I'm have lots of questions about this. I find myself going back and forth over the two styles and I'm thinking I may be more of a "throttle Junkie" rider.
I used to ride carbon road bikes not great distances but about 3,000 miles a year. I gave it up after one too many near misses with vehicles on a busy road on my daily ride. So, shifting was a part of my life and very natural. Then last year I got my eBike - a 500w geared rear hub drive - and found that shifting was really not necessary at all. After one year and 800 miles with my Vika + I find that I almost never shift gears. I do always pedal but I ride most of the time in PAS 5 and I'm really "ghost pedaling". (these phrases in quotes and all new terms I've discovered this week).
With my derailleur in 7th gear (highest) and PAS 5 I ride 6 to 10 miles a day near my home and take the ebike on RV trips. The only time I feel the pedals contributing is on the steepest hills. But not so much that I need to downshift. At first, I tested out shifting, It seemed to slow me down and not add much to the experience.
I do use a thumb throttle on steep hills when I know the bike will slow and I peddle to help as well.
Reading about hub drives I have found out that it changes the riding experience back to shifting for road conditions more like bike riding and less like riding a motor scooter.
But it's that motor scooter ebike ridding that I've learned to love.
So, I'm going to have to take a test ride on a mid-drive bike and see if I can make this change and be happy.
I've ridden and built with every Bafang BBSxx series motor. I continue to help a shop support those motors, but for me the perfect commuter is a one-speed MAC 10T. FAR fewer issues and the option of using multiple batteries. 36v, 48v, 52v, and even 60V if you use due diligence. I do still ride several bikes with 36V BBSxx series motors. They're are multiuse bike path rides. <20MPH.I think once you do the mid drive you wont want to ride the hub anymore.
Actually I misspoke... I meant "Reading about MID-drives" when I posted hub drives. I have now edited that line and noted that it's an edit.Actually it's the mid drives that require shifting, unless you have a single gear power train.
That looks like a very nice and reasonably priced kit. Do you know what the gear ratio reduction is?I decided to go with what I know and already like... the rear hub drive.
I ordered a Dillenger Premium Off-Road kit with a 700C wheel, 500-1000w BLDC geared motor, 48v 13ah Lithium Battery. It's "Off-Road" because top speed is 28mph/45kpm. I'll start a new thread when I start my build. Thanks all for helping me through this choice.
PS. The Dillenger kit is on-sale, in-stock and they ship pretty much same day.
No, they say it's their proprietary Dillenger branded motor (?) and that it is "Geared reduction hub drive" and nothing more.That looks like a very nice and reasonably priced kit. Do you know what the gear ratio reduction is?
A hub motor like that eliminates the chainline and chainring issues and limitations that mid drive kits have.