Captain Slow
Well-Known Member
Went for a breakfast ride today and since I didn't need to rush to work or anything I thought I'd ride in Eco to test range claims as well as just have a leisurely ride. It was a sunny day (dry weather, but a bit cold on the morning part of the ride), little to no wind.
With the gear I was carrying, plus my weight I'd estimate that total weight carried by the bike was around 200 - 210 lbs. I rode a total of 42.15 km's using 296 watt hours, and I gained 282 metres of elevation. My average speed was 22.3 km/hr. or 13.86 m/hr.
That works out to 7.022 watts/km, or if my conversion is correct 11.299 watts/mile.
According to the "real-world" mileage claims on the Juiced website if you were using assist level 3 with a 190 lb. total payload on flat ground, warm dry weather that going 14 mph you would use 9.7 watt hours per mile. Using Eco where I find it's a much lower drain I used 11.3 watt hours per mile though I did gain 282 metres of elevation, plus my total weight was above the 190 lbs. for their claims.
I suppose it's hard to know how much to adjust for the higher power level, etc ..... but I suspect that if I rode level 3 on flat ground that I probably wouldn't get 9.7 watt hours per mile.
I would be interested in how much battery consumption others are seeing and their parameters. It hasn't been a significant issue, but I am finding that I wish I'd bought the 17.4 ah battery and cycle satiator. If I wanted to ride around time running a whole bunch of errands I'd have range anxiety with my current battery. Having the mid-level battery would significantly help the range and the satiator would allow me to top up the charge and pretty much eliminate range anxiety.
Let's see what happens this summer as I use the bike to ride errands on weekends. Again, would really like to have others post their battery efficiency numbers in this thread, how they use the bike and if they got a bigger than standard battery what their experience has been.
With the gear I was carrying, plus my weight I'd estimate that total weight carried by the bike was around 200 - 210 lbs. I rode a total of 42.15 km's using 296 watt hours, and I gained 282 metres of elevation. My average speed was 22.3 km/hr. or 13.86 m/hr.
That works out to 7.022 watts/km, or if my conversion is correct 11.299 watts/mile.
According to the "real-world" mileage claims on the Juiced website if you were using assist level 3 with a 190 lb. total payload on flat ground, warm dry weather that going 14 mph you would use 9.7 watt hours per mile. Using Eco where I find it's a much lower drain I used 11.3 watt hours per mile though I did gain 282 metres of elevation, plus my total weight was above the 190 lbs. for their claims.
I suppose it's hard to know how much to adjust for the higher power level, etc ..... but I suspect that if I rode level 3 on flat ground that I probably wouldn't get 9.7 watt hours per mile.
I would be interested in how much battery consumption others are seeing and their parameters. It hasn't been a significant issue, but I am finding that I wish I'd bought the 17.4 ah battery and cycle satiator. If I wanted to ride around time running a whole bunch of errands I'd have range anxiety with my current battery. Having the mid-level battery would significantly help the range and the satiator would allow me to top up the charge and pretty much eliminate range anxiety.
Let's see what happens this summer as I use the bike to ride errands on weekends. Again, would really like to have others post their battery efficiency numbers in this thread, how they use the bike and if they got a bigger than standard battery what their experience has been.