My wife has the same issues. I had converted her Dahon Briza which is low step but she wanted even lower so she doesn't ride that bike anymore (I removed the motor and put it on another folder).I really appreciate the time taken by you guys. Here's more detail--
We live in Evergreen--no level ground. Both my wife and I (retired) regularly exercise just not using a bike--net elevation gain on any path too much. We test rode ebikes in Denver last week and rented the same bikes yesterday and rode Cherry Creek/REI. Provided the shop allows, we will again rent but this time fold, drive to Evergreen. She will likely buy the Fatte folding (I looked up the Lectric XP 2.0 and it's ~1/3 the $ of the Fatte?). She needs a 'sit up straight' bike with a low step through and their folding does both.
OTOH, I need a lean forward (back). Given the shop's rental availables... I too rented the folding with Connie to get an idea what the electric assist was like. Since her mountain bike is just hanging on the garage wall, I figured it made sense to convert it. From the perspective of not knowing much about bikes, I assumed an ebike just adds the motor/battery/electronics to an ordinary bike...why not? From what you all are saying so far, maybe not?
Mark
I see you have never worked in a LBS as a bike wrench before. Majority of our repairs are inner tubes. People don't even have the basic tools to install a saddle on a post.bicycles are such simple and easy to work on machines that just about any able person can perform virtually any service if they are willing.
So true! People will call the appliance repair service when a nickel is sideways in the washing machine out-flow sump collector. It takes three minutes to diagnose and fix. They cannot hang a picture or swap a capacitor in a fridge. One guy I knew was so proud he hung a hammock that came to work the next day with a concussion, shaved patch and stiches. There is a certain pride and noble status in acting the role of damsel in distress. When I was a banking executive in a suit I would be asked to change the 20' high bulb in the ladies room because, "We all have heals and nails." Then golf was ladies only because guys, I was the only one anywhere around, have advantaged status. The guy who busted his head, by the way, had manicures, moose, and too much cologne. A true noble aloof to doing menial tasks.I see you have never worked in a LBS as a bike wrench before. Majority of our repairs are inner tubes. People don't even have the basic tools to install a saddle on a post.
What you wrote can also apply to home plumbing, auto mechanices, home renovations. Yes, it all appears easy, but few do it.
Same is true for me. I've done the Tongsheng mid drive installation several times now but uninterrupted I have removed it from one bike and installed into another in under an hour using less than $20 worth of bike specific tools. It seems to take days to get a hub drive fully installed the way I want it (I've done this on several bikes also) because there always seems to be some niggle or complication, some bikes easier than others. I end up leaving the installation incomplete for days before getting back to it and often not pleased with the results especially the mess of wires and controller location. Mid drive is a much more simple and clean installation.I think a mid drive is less effort to install than a hub motor, having done some of each. Granted. you need two bike specific tools ($10 each) to remove the pedals/axle, and sometimes there's some casting slag inside that blocks the mid drive. However, the later is easily filed off, and you could get the bike shop, if they are not busy, to remove the pedals.
On the plus side, there is no need to determine where to put the electronics. They're inside the motor. I've got a mid drive to install myself, but I was enjoying riding the donor bike around (not too far) w/o a motor, I've procrastined. Yeah, and there's about a month of other chores....
Evergreen - West of Denver ~25 minutes - mountains - in Denver & surrounding all the time. Evergreen is more like a non-suburban suburb<g>.Biggest thing about doing a conversion is having a bike that suits the conversion, and being mechanically inclined so your attention to detail on such projects will let you NOT build an abomination with a skewed chain line, or any number of rookie moves. By and large all of the problems new builders have are associated with sloppy work.
The careful builder gets it figured out, either by paying attention, or asking around before doing something irrevocable. Like in the First Rule of Gunsmithing: Its a lot easier to file metal off than it is to put it back on again.
If you aren't up for a project and don't love to work in the garage evenings on your bikes... give serious thought to just buying one.
@Markg2 I see you are in the Denver/Cherry Creek area. I strongly suggest you visit Ebikes USA's Cherry Creek showroom. I know the owner, Houshmand Moarefi, and he is one of the good guys. He got his start as a rider who upgraded his own ebikes and eventually quit his job and started a business doing what he loves. His company is committed to education and helping new riders. If you want to learn about ebikes and your options, I suggest you go by his shop and play stump-the-chump with them
My wife has the same issues. I had converted her Dahon Briza which is low step but she wanted even lower so she doesn't ride that bike anymore (I removed the motor and put it on another folder).
Here was that conversion (after this picture I cleaned up the wiring some and put the battery in a handlebar bag)
View attachment 91313
Now I have that motor on a Walmart folder that I've had for years.
View attachment 91314
A bike mechanic who knows what he or she is doing should be able to install a mid drive conversion in well under an hour but there might not be bike shops interested in doing this type of work and it probably wouldn't be cheap.
An Ariel Rideal looks like a nice rear hub motor bike for $1000 and might be better than converting the bike you have.
I agree that a Lectric 2.0 looks like a much better value than the Penalosa Fatte.