Had some fun the past few days. Between 5 different days - trying to have days that had similar weather conditions - I took my Allant 9.9s for 5 separate rides.
The route I chose is 25 miles with 236 ft of "climbing" (I live in the midwest). Here are the results if you're interested! It's been fun running the bike through these tests - I've been curious since buying the bike. I tried to maintain the same level of effort between each ride. Kind of a 'level 2' effort out of say a 5. So just enough to sweat but still able to enjoy the ride. An "endurance" effort I guess (I use a heart rate monitor which helps determine effort - also been riding since racing triathlons in 2008-2011 and bike racing from 2011 to 2015 so I'm used to what a steady effort feels like).
May 6: No pedal assist - 43 degrees f - 7 mph nw wind
1 hour 22 minutes 42 seconds
May 7: Level 1 pedal assist - 45 degrees f - 7 mph wsw wind
1 hour 8 minutes 2 seconds
Starting charge level 80% finished with 40% left
May 11: Level 2 pedal assist - 44 degrees f - 7 mph w wind
59 minutes 35 seconds
Starting charge level 80% finished with 4% left
May 12: Level 3 pedal assist - 40 degrees f - 7 mph s wind
57 minutes 14 seconds
Starting charge level 100% finished with 24% left
May 13: Level 4 pedal assist - 49 degrees f - 8 mph ese wind
55 minutes 36 seconds
Starting charge level 100% finished with 26% left
So there you have it. I think I should have started at 100% charge for the level 1 and 2 assist rides but I think it's still interesting numbers. It's interesting that my level 3 vs level 4 ride resulted in more charge left for the higher assist level - not sure what's up with that. Maybe the 9 degrees difference in temp is enough to help with battery efficiency? It's interesting that levels 2, 3, and 4 rides all used roughly the same percentage of charge ~74-76% used.
I'm really liking the bike though. Very fun to ride! I think my next tests like this would be to see just how long I can go on each effort - maybe keep the ride around 20mph.
I think I could get quite far actually! Still not as far as I could go on an analog bike - but it's still a fun bike to ride.
The route I chose is 25 miles with 236 ft of "climbing" (I live in the midwest). Here are the results if you're interested! It's been fun running the bike through these tests - I've been curious since buying the bike. I tried to maintain the same level of effort between each ride. Kind of a 'level 2' effort out of say a 5. So just enough to sweat but still able to enjoy the ride. An "endurance" effort I guess (I use a heart rate monitor which helps determine effort - also been riding since racing triathlons in 2008-2011 and bike racing from 2011 to 2015 so I'm used to what a steady effort feels like).
May 6: No pedal assist - 43 degrees f - 7 mph nw wind
1 hour 22 minutes 42 seconds
May 7: Level 1 pedal assist - 45 degrees f - 7 mph wsw wind
1 hour 8 minutes 2 seconds
Starting charge level 80% finished with 40% left
May 11: Level 2 pedal assist - 44 degrees f - 7 mph w wind
59 minutes 35 seconds
Starting charge level 80% finished with 4% left
May 12: Level 3 pedal assist - 40 degrees f - 7 mph s wind
57 minutes 14 seconds
Starting charge level 100% finished with 24% left
May 13: Level 4 pedal assist - 49 degrees f - 8 mph ese wind
55 minutes 36 seconds
Starting charge level 100% finished with 26% left
So there you have it. I think I should have started at 100% charge for the level 1 and 2 assist rides but I think it's still interesting numbers. It's interesting that my level 3 vs level 4 ride resulted in more charge left for the higher assist level - not sure what's up with that. Maybe the 9 degrees difference in temp is enough to help with battery efficiency? It's interesting that levels 2, 3, and 4 rides all used roughly the same percentage of charge ~74-76% used.
I'm really liking the bike though. Very fun to ride! I think my next tests like this would be to see just how long I can go on each effort - maybe keep the ride around 20mph.