ez3putt
Active Member
It seems like every few weeks (days?) someone posts about rain and ebikes. This is my third season to take my ebike to the North Carolina rain forest and by far the wettest. I have been through countless rain storms with the bike unprotected on the rack. I have ridden through mud, creeks, sugar sand, and flooded bike paths. I have never taken any precautions to protect the bike. The first six days of this trip through GA and NC, the bike never left the rack and it got rained on every day. When I took the bike off the rack, the only visible damage I noticed was rust on the chain and a little lubricant took care of that.
Having said all this, last week I noticed a little water in the display. That was after three inches of rain in a little over an hour. Everything still works and if this rain ever quits, I will take a hair dryer and try to dry it out. My mindset is that I bought this bike as an OUTDOOR recreational and utilitarian vehicle. If I wanted something that was allergic to water, I would have gotten a stationary bike.
It has now been raining on my bike for the past twenty-four hours and a tornado warning has been issued or our area as the remnants of Fred passes through. I checked the bike a few minutes ago and everything still works. Maybe I have just been lucky, but even if I have to replace the display and/or controller, that is pretty cheap maintenance over two and a half years.
Having said all this, last week I noticed a little water in the display. That was after three inches of rain in a little over an hour. Everything still works and if this rain ever quits, I will take a hair dryer and try to dry it out. My mindset is that I bought this bike as an OUTDOOR recreational and utilitarian vehicle. If I wanted something that was allergic to water, I would have gotten a stationary bike.
It has now been raining on my bike for the past twenty-four hours and a tornado warning has been issued or our area as the remnants of Fred passes through. I checked the bike a few minutes ago and everything still works. Maybe I have just been lucky, but even if I have to replace the display and/or controller, that is pretty cheap maintenance over two and a half years.