I am once again exploring what is available out there in e touring bikes or what may be just over the horizon.
I built a e touring bike in 2016 because there was nothing even close to what I needed on the shelf. Things appear to be getting much closer and adding to the stable rather than build is what I am currently looking at.
Let me define long distance touring bike. "A bike capable of doing the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route no problem, no sweat". That means a bike with the capability to do off road/gravel, some sand, climbing, wind and heat for 135 miles without a charge. That definition is quite different to what the industry thinks is long distance.
I think I can now buy something better than what I have off the shelf with the exception that fast charging is still in the dark ages. Come on, 5 lousy amps is dismal. I currently charge with a 15 amp charger but might be able to live with 5 if other things beat the present bike.
I am retired, it's my fun and so there is no real budget.
The bike has got to carry about 250 lbs
Possibilities include:
Luna Z1 Enduro with a couple extra batteries $6k. Inexpensive, full suspension available and history with Luna, Cons Extra batteries, lack of racks and attachment points and not super water resistant.
QuietKat IBEX E Bike with a couple extra batteries $7K. Inexpensive, full suspension, available, history with company good attachments and racks. Cons, extra batteries, color schemes
Watt Wagon Hound Supercharged $9K+ Large very water resistant battery in case, good racks, internal charger, low center of gravity, great specs and geometry, high water resistance, powerful. Cons, Absolutely sht olive drab paint job. Looks like it needs white stars and American flags, A beast to handle in technical terrain. Heavy hard tail
Optibike R17 with extra battery $16K Well integrated, great company support, huge suspension travel, great geometry, rugged, great specs, nearly water proof, very capable low maintenance bike, fast, powerful. Cons, Very Expensive, looks a bit too much like a motor cycle, lack of attachment points and racks, accessories are too pricy, lack of flexibility to make it class 1,2 or 3.
Right now I would be leaning towards the Watt Wagon. Any one of these bikes I would need to locate and try before I committed to a purchase. I would also keep my present E bike as a spare for anyone whishing to join me on an adventure. Right now everyone's excuse is "I don't have a capable bike" Present bike is a Titanium E fat, BBSHD, 52 volt 2.5KwH battery. 20K miles.
I already know what it takes power wise to tour off road. The battery needs to push 3KwH and the bike 750 watts min to do the job. A solar charger would reduce battery size. Need to really investigate that. I am not a fan of solar.
Okay, the questions:
Anyone have any experience with any of these bikes?
What bikes am I missing?
What is jut over the horizon that I should wait for?
I built a e touring bike in 2016 because there was nothing even close to what I needed on the shelf. Things appear to be getting much closer and adding to the stable rather than build is what I am currently looking at.
Let me define long distance touring bike. "A bike capable of doing the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route no problem, no sweat". That means a bike with the capability to do off road/gravel, some sand, climbing, wind and heat for 135 miles without a charge. That definition is quite different to what the industry thinks is long distance.
I think I can now buy something better than what I have off the shelf with the exception that fast charging is still in the dark ages. Come on, 5 lousy amps is dismal. I currently charge with a 15 amp charger but might be able to live with 5 if other things beat the present bike.
I am retired, it's my fun and so there is no real budget.
The bike has got to carry about 250 lbs
Possibilities include:
Luna Z1 Enduro with a couple extra batteries $6k. Inexpensive, full suspension available and history with Luna, Cons Extra batteries, lack of racks and attachment points and not super water resistant.
QuietKat IBEX E Bike with a couple extra batteries $7K. Inexpensive, full suspension, available, history with company good attachments and racks. Cons, extra batteries, color schemes
Watt Wagon Hound Supercharged $9K+ Large very water resistant battery in case, good racks, internal charger, low center of gravity, great specs and geometry, high water resistance, powerful. Cons, Absolutely sht olive drab paint job. Looks like it needs white stars and American flags, A beast to handle in technical terrain. Heavy hard tail
Optibike R17 with extra battery $16K Well integrated, great company support, huge suspension travel, great geometry, rugged, great specs, nearly water proof, very capable low maintenance bike, fast, powerful. Cons, Very Expensive, looks a bit too much like a motor cycle, lack of attachment points and racks, accessories are too pricy, lack of flexibility to make it class 1,2 or 3.
Right now I would be leaning towards the Watt Wagon. Any one of these bikes I would need to locate and try before I committed to a purchase. I would also keep my present E bike as a spare for anyone whishing to join me on an adventure. Right now everyone's excuse is "I don't have a capable bike" Present bike is a Titanium E fat, BBSHD, 52 volt 2.5KwH battery. 20K miles.
I already know what it takes power wise to tour off road. The battery needs to push 3KwH and the bike 750 watts min to do the job. A solar charger would reduce battery size. Need to really investigate that. I am not a fan of solar.
Okay, the questions:
Anyone have any experience with any of these bikes?
What bikes am I missing?
What is jut over the horizon that I should wait for?