Andrebandre
Member
Gone riding
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I am relatively new to electric bikes...I would suggest your current projects as bike #2 and #3. Meanwhile you could be riding an upright purpose built bike. Then you would be having fun and riding while working on your projects.
Thoughts?
Thanks for the kind and sound advice guys!
I do like to tinker and i am very particular about the performance and looks of my bikes so i end up spending quite a bit of money in my more often than not futile attempts to get what i wish for in a bike.
At least i learn a little in regard to what can and cannot be accomplished as far as i'm concerned.
This would be my 4th mid drive ebike and i do have a main commuter bike that works well (so far) and i'm pleased with only it is a 20 in wheel and doesn't fare all that well off road.
I was thinking of an enduro bike that would allow me to ride over rough terrain (some uncultivated fields) in order to avoid riding through a neighborhood with lose dogs that usually take all the fun out my daily commute to and
from work, and generally to avoid traffic.
If i succed, life will be better, if i fail, at least i will have gained some knowledge, although the hard and expensive way.
So far, this frame having a large diameter downtube and a 73mm BB is not best suited for the Bafang. The top bolt that holds the anti rolling clamp could rest against the frame if the motor rolls upward due to torque.
A third isue that i have wrestled with all along is mounting a front derailleur in order to keep a better chainline and also for more range. I am starting to think it is next to impossible. I was hoping a Lekkie and a 52 outer mounted
to an adapter migh work with a friction shifter. But partly due to the derailleur limitation as far as chainring sizes, partly the mounting itself i doubt i will be able to make it happen. A MTB derailleur can only go up to maybe 44T
but could be mounted with an adapter or a road dearailleur which could handle the chainrings i would like to use but cannot be mounted without some heavy modification.
Ravi:I echo Grecnh's thoughts. Considering the time, effort and money involved, you could get a nice FSP bike. As the model year is coming to an end, you should be able to get good deals as well.
Unless you like DIY and have a great bike already, the return on investment on DIY stuff is pretty low.
Ravi:
You keep making reference to year end good deals. Are you dealer affiliated and/or have interest in a bike shop? If so, you should let forum posters know that your are trying to solicit business.
Yes, I am involved with Lenny's business.
But I'm not trying to solicit business here. Looks like he was struggling to get a quality bike and instead of getting stuck with a cheap chinese kit and losing money, he could easily get a sparsely used one and be happy.
If I was soliciting business, I would talk about selling Neo Carbon at a price higher than what I bought for and also the Topeak Bag
Sent this to Len with my opinion of your ethics..............
Thanks for the heads up Ravi...it's nice when the cannibals get called out for trying to eat their own!Yes, I am involved with Lenny's business.
But I'm not trying to solicit business here. Looks like he was struggling to get a quality bike and instead of getting stuck with a cheap chinese kit and losing money, he could easily get a sparsely used one and be happy.
If I was soliciting business, I would talk about selling Neo Carbon at a price higher than what I bought for and also the Topeak Bag
Well my plan didn't work out after all.
I haven't given up hope that i might be able to come up with some idea and means to mount the battery in its designated spot but for now i will live with it as it is.
Possibly one of those new batteries from Lectric with a lower profile might work. I'll keep trying i guess. It is not a complete failure but not what i envisaged.
I know man but i am extremely picky about the looks of my bikes or any other junk that i own for that matter (i like straight bars) and you can only do so much with stems before they affect the way the bike rides. Or so it seems to me.
I was unable to source a large frame in the model that i wanted and hoped the medium will accomodate the battery and i took the gamble.
I don't mind experimenting and spending whatever i can afford in order to get the bike as i wish it or as close to it as possible. If it doesn't look right (to me) i don't want it no matter how performant.
Fortunately for me i don't have any other hobbies and i live modestly so i can pump every spare dime into this project regardless how expensive it will end up. Well almost.
I was contemplating at some point getting a Spitzing M1 which looks nice but i could not live with the color scheme and i ended spending about the same amount for nothing, so far, if i don't succed.
There are many options out there but none fit my taste and requirements. So i decided to try and put one together from parts.
This one has components from a Giant Anthem and a Trance in order to increase the suspension travel and not have the motor hanging down too close to the ground and at too much of an angle. The Trance has the downtube curving horizontally before it reaches the BB and the motor has to be kind of hanging down. For my intended purpose there was enough clearance from the ground but i didn't like the way it looked.
Still waiting for the battery clamps, i had hoped they might arrive today but no gain.
View attachment 4076
Here is my ghetto solution (for now) after having had the battery ejected by the front tire.
The first time while i was trying to find an alternate route through a field which unfortunately has every 30 feet or so a foot deep/wide channel dug up, probably to collect rain and as it is radially cultivated and i ride across it i cross quite a few of these ditches. I didn't even notice i lost the battery being so stressed looking out for one of the meanest dog i have ever had the displeasure to meet which i was trying to avoid hence the off road route.
I thought it suddenly got warmer outside or the breeze had stopped but never realized i am pedaling with no power assitst. Once i passed the danger zone and stopped to allow my heart to sttele down a bit, i noticed that the battery was gone. Retraced my steps stealthly and found it somewhere near one the formentioned ditches.
The second time again riding through a greenfield and admiring the south western achitecture of some buildings, i hit a pothole sort of thing and flew over the handlebars with the same result, battery ejection.
Although i adjusted the front fork pressure stiffer and for general use i had no problems, still in extraordinary cases the tire would travel high enough and hit the battery.
So for the time being i have moved it inside the frame but i am working on a more estetic solution. It works but it is ugly.