vincent713
Active Member
I'm convinced that the test was accurate, pretty impressive for a big heavy bike.
Here's the math:
15 w/h per mile
15 miles per hour
In an hour multiply the two and get 225 watts. So if you run 225 watts for an hour and go 15 miles it's 15 w/h per mile. But the constant watt burn is 225 watts. It's the 225/15 miles (15 miles per hour, in an hour)
If the battery is 360 w/h, you should get 360/225 * 15 miles, full to flat battery. Low 20's.
Maybe... but the battery is only 316 w/hrs I just find it hard to believe that at constant 15w discharge you can sustain 14, 15mph...
Like I said I wish I were wrong... I don't expect any where near 15 or 20 miles on a RR without pedaling...
Craig documented his range results on Facebook. Around 22 miles range at low pressure 15 psi over semi rough road. Sounds right.
Just to clarify, on a fat bike 15psi is ridiculously high pressure. Most people ride their fat bikes in the 6-10psi range depending on riding conditions. I am a big guy and ride 7-8 up front and 10 in the rear wheel.
Here's the math:
15 w/h per mile
15 miles per hour
In an hour multiply the two and get 225 watts. So if you run 225 watts for an hour and go 15 miles it's 15 w/h per mile. But the constant watt burn is 225 watts. It's the 225/15 miles (15 miles per hour, in an hour)
If the battery is 360 w/h, you should get 360/225 * 15 miles, full to flat battery. Low 20's.
His average speed according to his Garmin posting: 14.2 mph
That's average. That means there were times he went slower than 14mph (and times he went faster as well). He wasn't maintaining 14 or 15 mph at every point in the total mileage he rode.
Thanks George ,
I was in a hurry doing the math.. Another way ... At a continuos 225 w for 1.5 hrs= 337.5w / 36v = 9.375 amp/hrs or more than the Sondors battery is rated... so it is more like a continuos 211 w for 1.5 hrs+ 8.8 amp/hrs.. but now we are splitting hairs...
We really need a watt meter with volts measured concurrently... to see if the Sondors will really go 15 mph drawing only 211w ... Or maybe the sweet spot is 10, 12, 8 mph ???... for max. range??
When is Court going to finish his testing??[/QUOTE
http://bikecalculator.com/how.html
If you fill in the stuff like MTB tires, weights, barends, this will get you close.
We need someone to put a Watts Up meter on the bike, run it at 200 watts, see how fast it goes. I'd love to see that for every bike, but fat versus hybrids for sure. I'd like to know true battery capacity, how the pedal assist is set up, etc.
I would definitely like to know the 'price' of those tires, because no one really know what it does to performance.
The complexity of bikes these days (not the Sondors necessarily) begs for some hard numbers.
Reviews appear inconsistent.
Aaron MaxwellGot mine this past weekend.
Pros: looks great, rides smooth, has decent thrust.
Cons: no way will go 50 miles, battery doesn't even last past 10 miles with 95% peddling, and peddle broke off first climb up a hill. Threads on peddle crank shaft stripped and now can't ride.
Not bad! Better than I expected.
Sondors eBike no pedaling range test
Test date = July 19, 2015
Range = 21.8 miles
Avg speed 14.2 mph
Rider weight = 161 lb.
Tire pressure = 15 psi
Weather = temperature 92F, 1-2 mph headwind out, tailwind back
Course = fairly flat rough paved road, 2 miles out, 2 miles back
Bicycle Condition = Stock, less than two weeks old, approximately 70 miles total
Battery Condition = fully charged, 9 battery charge cycles