Here's a picture without the guard i found on the internet.Do you have a pic of yours?
Here's a picture without the guard i found on the internet.Do you have a pic of yours?
Here’s the web page for the picture: https://www.bouldercyclesport.com/new-giant-ebikes-in-stock/ and another QuickE+ without a guard I found on a stolen bike page:https://bikeindex.org/bikes/420463. I will check my LBS in my area to see if their floor stock have the guard I would think that the guard would be factory installed.That's a bigger chain ring than the stock one so maybe a mod?
I noticed your Quick E+ does not have the chain guard on the front sprocket as shown on the giant web site: https://www.giant-bicycles.com/us/quick-eplus-1-2019 the reason I am asking is my wife bought a Quick e+ and it came without a guard.As requested—Pictures......View attachment 25298View attachment 25299
Here's a pic, first pic is mine (apologies it's hard to see with the guard on), the second pic is a zoom in of the above bike. Look at the space between the bolt and the teeth, and then the inside space and the teeth. It's a lot smaller on mine than the others, so I reckon the stock images used on Giant's website are of my configuration (smaller chain ring with chain guard) whereas you guys are getting a bigger chain ring with no guard.
It would be good to know how many teeth your chain ring has as I'm guessing it's 48 or higher (mine is 42)
Yes, speed is read off the wheel magnet. There is also a speed/torque sensor on the crankset. That doesn’t measure bike speed, just your pedal input for when/how hard to run the motor.Not sure, I assume the speed is read from the sensor on the back wheel. I'll do some GPS speed readings before and after to confirm
Hi Guys, I managed to get an extended demo of a Quick-E so I could try my commute. A funny thing happened in that it seemed like really hard work to me and I complained to the dealer. I reckoned I was getting Zero assistance when riding at 23-25km/h and this was backed up by using only 4 % battery over 30km (probably the lights). Anyway, this bike had had the battery replaced and for some reason they have a mode for the testers at the factory which restricts the bike to 18km/h before assistance cuts out and the battery replacement had triggered the bike to go back into this mode! I took it back to the dealer who took it for a spin and pressed a combination of buttons that fixed it ---- hmmm, makes me wonder if they can 'de-restrict' totally just with a few button presses !!!!.
So the dealer brought the bike back round to my house so that I could get another chance and I rode it to Melbourne CBD today.
I have to say that it's a fantastic tool - grips and saddle are a little bit uncomfortable, but I found I could ride it at 25-27km/h all the time easily. (Aussie bikes are restricted to 25km/h by the way). The 20km there took 56 minutes and I got the same time back again. Logged the rides in the Giant app RideControl so I can check back how I did later.
Will definitely pull the pin on one !
My 48T Chain ring arrived yesterday so popped in on and went for a spin.
Speed readings are still accurate (comparing with GPS app on phone)
Gears are now more useful, before I was pretty much only using the top 5 gears, now I go through the range more, and I don't run out of gears when hammering it.
Top speed is probably not that much faster as resistance kicks in around 50km/h, but it feels better getting up there.
I also pumped up the tyres to a higher pressure for road riding. I didn't check actual readings but was over 40psi. They came from the shop fairly soft for off road usage but I never go offroad. Now it feels like the bike rolls better too.
The last thing I want to do is shorten the handlebar as they are a mountain bike type width which feels too wide on some tight city paths. I think they're 690mm standard so might cut about 60mm off to make it not so obtrusive.