Douglas Wever
Member
On a steep learning curve as a new ebiker - appreciate your grace and patience as I have peppered this board with posts. Or if you can refer me to primer to make sense out of all the electrical stuff. THANKS!
The Trek-only dealer I work with about 100 miles from me called for the rest of my $1,700 deposit today as they have a firm delivery date on my Trek XM 700 + Pedelec ($3,400) between August 8-11. Very happy as originally it could’ve been as late as October.
I am currently a happy and recent owner of a Raleigh Detour iE (20mph), and I am having some range anxiety about the Trek being 10 miles shorter at full assist, with the Trek at just 15 miles minimum and 65 maximum whilst the Raleigh is 25 and 45 miles, and just yesterday I backed off max assist on my Raleigh at night to be sure to get home. My minimum round-trip is 12 miles and I ride at full assist using my legs to give me two to five extra mph depending.
Can someone help me sort out what to expect from the Trek for range and top speed at their three levels of assistance given the comparative motor and battery specs below? I'm trying to know if given equal speeds, will the Trek have greater range than the Raleigh and so the Trek's range hopefully will only suck at 28 mph (full-on assist) but then have greater range at equal speeds with the Raleigh?
Also, are compatible higher capacity batteries available from Samsung who manufactures batteries for Trek?
Trek -
Raleigh
Just for comparison, the Stromer ST2 ($7,990) gives 60 miles at full 28mph assist and 90 at minimum. It has a Rear-Mounted Gearless Direct Drive Hub with nominal output at 500 watts and peak at 750 from a gearless direct drive rear hub with 42 Newton meters of torque. Batter voltage is 48 with 17ah (optional 20.5ah) and 814 wh with optional 983.
The Light Bulb Example and Watt Hours
Light bulbs are usually referred to by their wattage. For example, a 60W light bulb when on will consume 60 watts of electricity. The rate at which the light bulb consumes the electricity is the power. If you leave that light bulb on for 2 hours, then the light bulb will have consumed 120 watt-hours (2 hours X 60 watts). That is the measure of the energy consumed to do the work of lighting up the light bulb.
You are probably most familiar with electrical energy in the form of kilowatt hours (kWh) which is the unit you pay for on your electricity bill. A kilowatt hour is simply one thousand watt hours. The average home in the US consumes 958 kWh per month - green wording links to US Energy Information Administration.
The Trek-only dealer I work with about 100 miles from me called for the rest of my $1,700 deposit today as they have a firm delivery date on my Trek XM 700 + Pedelec ($3,400) between August 8-11. Very happy as originally it could’ve been as late as October.
I am currently a happy and recent owner of a Raleigh Detour iE (20mph), and I am having some range anxiety about the Trek being 10 miles shorter at full assist, with the Trek at just 15 miles minimum and 65 maximum whilst the Raleigh is 25 and 45 miles, and just yesterday I backed off max assist on my Raleigh at night to be sure to get home. My minimum round-trip is 12 miles and I ride at full assist using my legs to give me two to five extra mph depending.
Can someone help me sort out what to expect from the Trek for range and top speed at their three levels of assistance given the comparative motor and battery specs below? I'm trying to know if given equal speeds, will the Trek have greater range than the Raleigh and so the Trek's range hopefully will only suck at 28 mph (full-on assist) but then have greater range at equal speeds with the Raleigh?
Also, are compatible higher capacity batteries available from Samsung who manufactures batteries for Trek?
Trek -
- Mid mounted gear motor Bosch Performance Speed Generation 2
- Nominal Output - 350 watts
- Torque - 60 Newton Meters
- Range 15 and 65.
- Samsung Battery
- Voltage - 36;
- Amp Hours - 11ah;
- Watt hours - 396.
- Tour = 120%; Sport 190%; Turbo 275%.
- Rear Mounted Gearless Direct Drive Hub Currie Electro Drive
- Nominal Output - 500 Watts
- Range 25 and 45.
- Battery Voltage -
- 48 Volts;
- amp hours - 8.8ah;
- Watt hours 422.4 (not an error by me, the Raleigh shows more than the Trek).
The Light Bulb Example and Watt Hours
Light bulbs are usually referred to by their wattage. For example, a 60W light bulb when on will consume 60 watts of electricity. The rate at which the light bulb consumes the electricity is the power. If you leave that light bulb on for 2 hours, then the light bulb will have consumed 120 watt-hours (2 hours X 60 watts). That is the measure of the energy consumed to do the work of lighting up the light bulb.
You are probably most familiar with electrical energy in the form of kilowatt hours (kWh) which is the unit you pay for on your electricity bill. A kilowatt hour is simply one thousand watt hours. The average home in the US consumes 958 kWh per month - green wording links to US Energy Information Administration.
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