The chain guide on a BBS02 build I did a tune on today was the battery. As soon as I saw the motor I checked the chain. Sure enough. It also had loops of wires and a lose motor that crushed the shift housing routed between the motor and downtube.I just put my unused TSDZ2 with the standard 42t 5mm dished chainring on a 20" folder that has 11-34 freewheel. As always the chainline was bad on the largest rear cog but having a 42t 10mm offset narrow-wide aftermarket chainring I replaced the OEM with that instead. The chainline significantly improved but on the 34t rear cog the NW chainring wanted to walk the chain and drop it off due to the short chain distance from the chainring to the rear cog. This didn't happen with the stamped OEM even though it only had 5mm offset because the narrow teeth didn't cause the chain to climb off. I made a chain guide out of some parts box stuff that I have sitting around. Now no chain drop and the guide only has very minimal contact with the chain, and only on the 34t cog - being stopped from climbing off the chainring as soon as it wants to start.
I've never broken a chain, either, across many bikes, miles, years etc. I do always carry a spare though. The whole chain not just a few links. And a breaker and a pair of pliers. I've spent too much time sitting roadside fixing things I never expected to break, to settle on half-measures.I run the standard kmc chains on bbshd, x1 cyc, to seven and everthing else I build. Prefer the micro shift 9 with the sunrace cassette reconfigured for good chain lines. Never broken a chain. Chain line is the secret to reliability on diy bikes. The factory rigs are designed around the good chain lines. The home brew ones aren`t. This is the reason I give up the half stepping gears to obtain a clean chain line. I usually end up with 6 speeds. The cross chaining is what is breaking your chain not the straight line pull.
What a repair shop s*it storm.. This sort of circus happens on motorcycle and automotive repair tickets too, where you step on a grenade and trip on the pin, sometimes costing days of misery and gold. Oem, neglect / abuse or hacker causes.. angered tool gods or sunspots maybe.I had to work on a Jetson 'bike' today. It was pre-billed $40 labor only as a rear tire change on a hub-drive bike. 1) There is no connector between the controller and the motor, so you need to work on the wheel upside down while it dangles by the wire. 2) The caliper sits behind the wheel so needs to be removed to pull the wheel from the rear horizontal dropouts. 3) The chainguard needs to be removed. 4) The right pedal needs to be removed because the crank is too short to fit a puller. 5) The crank and ring need to be removed to get off the chain because the stays are like 17 inches long with no play. 6) The chain with 20 months of WD-40 tar needs to be removed. 7) Then the tensioner can be loosened and the wheel dropped. 8) Then there is dealing with all the slime from a failed roadside attempt. 9) The new factory tube had a faulty valve, so replace the valve, and the stem is up against the disc so there is almost no logical way to pump it and also remove the frame pump from the valve before it re-deflates the third time. This particular one also had a highly warped rotor because someone tried and failed to remove the wheel without removing the caliper first. 10) The tensioner is on the right side only so it makes the disc go sideways. Oh, I have not heard back from To7 and may be out the money for a dud new motor.
Moral: Never throw your wallet at a steaming pile of dog crap. Get yourself a real bike. And just say, NO to a Jetson!
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I think their reputation will be short lived if they don`t change.
I realize that there are some significant engineering challenges with a single support bearing design, but this seems a bit excessive.
My experience with a Cyc X1 Pro told me I would not touch the Photon until its had two years in the market, and it turns out that was a good move. I said the same thing with ToSeven and sadly it doesn't look like we will need anywhere near that long to judge them.Oh, I have not heard back from To7 and may be out the money for a dud new motor.
I had to work on a Jetson 'bike' today. It was pre-billed $40 labor only as a rear tire change on a hub-drive bike. 1) There is no connector between the controller and the motor, so you need to work on the wheel upside down while it dangles by the wire. 2) The caliper sits behind the wheel so needs to be removed to pull the wheel from the rear horizontal dropouts. 3) The chainguard needs to be removed. 4) The right pedal needs to be removed because the crank is too short to fit a puller. 5) The crank and ring need to be removed to get off the chain because the stays are like 17 inches long with no play. 6) The chain with 20 months of WD-40 tar needs to be removed. 7) Then the tensioner can be loosened and the wheel dropped. 8) Then there is dealing with all the slime from a failed roadside attempt. 9) The new factory tube had a faulty valve, so replace the valve, and the stem is up against the disc so there is almost no logical way to pump it and also remove the frame pump from the valve before it re-deflates the third time. This particular one also had a highly warped rotor because someone tried and failed to remove the wheel without removing the caliper first. 10) The tensioner is on the right side only so it makes the disc go sideways. Oh, I have not heard back from To7 and may be out the money for a dud new motor.
Moral: Never throw your wallet at a steaming pile of dog crap. Get yourself a real bike. And just say, NO to a Jetson!
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Good advice.My experience with a Cyc X1 Pro told me I would not touch the Photon until its had two years in the market, and it turns out that was a good move. I said the same thing with ToSeven and sadly it doesn't look like we will need anywhere near that long to judge them.
I knew @m@Robertson's perspective going in and respect it. Yet I was willing to get out front on this learning curve. Leaders are not necessarily victors when taking a hill.
Good stuff.. My current Sram cluster is coming apart with loose rivets.. The DM01 is too much for it. I will give the Sunrace solid steel a go. I appreciate the cheaper chain too.For years, I swore by KMC x9e and e9 chains. That or the e11. But in recent years, the market has given us new options. Many moons ago I did a whole SRAM EX1 drivetrain ($$$), which in 2024 I would never even consider.
For 9s clusters, Microshift Advent has an 11-46T that is solid, hardened steel cogs. Pinned together all over the place and even the 11T cog is steel. And its like $40. For 10s, Microshift Advent X is the same durable animal as the 9s in 11-48T and its about $45. For 11s clusters, the strongest is the Sunrace CSMS7 which is all steel again, and also pinned-together. Steel spiders. 11-42T but they just released an 11-46T. About $60. The BFD uses a Sunrace CSMS8 which is all steel except for the 51T cog, which I can live with. But now we've bumped up to about $105. But if you want ultra wide range and 11s thats the only one I'd trust with a BBSHD.
For my 9s setups I have been using the SRAM EX1 chain, which is compatible with 8s thru 10S and is $25 or less. Indestructible. For 10 and 11s I've been using just 11s chains. The narrower exterior of the 11s makes a 10s as quiet as a belt and an 11s chain's interior dimensions are the same as 10s so it works just as well.
For derailleurs I've used Box 2 and Microshift for 9s, Advent X for 10S. SRAM GX for 11s. I have to say the Advent X is my favorite of the bunch for cost and smoothness. But the Box 2 ultra wide long cage is the slickest. And the most expensive..
As far as I can see, Most of the Linkglide system is just Shimano offering what you can get elsewhere for less $. In particular their cassettes. But if I wanted a wide range 11s derailleur, I'd have to go Linkglide. SRAM maxes out at 42T.
Yup it sure does. I am currently trying out a Gustavo chainring, which is a US$35 clone of the Lekkie. Just to see how it behaves. Its powder-coated vs. anodized so it appears to wear immediately, but thats just the powder coating wearing off. It also has a little less offset, but only a little. I've got a slew of Lekkie rings ranging from 52T all the way down to 28T, so I'm a big fan... but $35 versus about US$150 now on some of the sizes makes for a powerful argument to go cheap and just buy 5 of them as they wear out.I have never used a BBSHD without the lekkie 42t chainring so maybe the BBSHD with stock chainring has a bad chainline as well.
I've had a fair bit of personal communication with him and what I got was he had great hopes for the Cyc, but if you dig a little into his experiences, his wife was using the Photon for a pedelec commuter and it failed on her. Then he had to send the motor back to Cyc for a few weeks turnaround because there were no user-serviceable parts. He got the motor back, but an experience like that is the sort of thing that sours you on something you have to depend on for transportation. Especially when you see that Cyc is moving towards a dealer-service model.Its obvious to me that the 'high voltage channel' on youtube has a grudge against CYC and the photon. As can be seen from his videos, he likes to ride around on throttle only and sells BBSHD 72V kits so thats his perspective.
Because I can see other people reporting their experiences, and they sound entirely familiar in terms of the nature of the problem. I've also had the opportunity to talk directly with people who have experience trying to sell them. I take it you've heard the publicly acknowledged return rate on these motors? All you have to do is scroll up and you'll see another one here in this thread. And this is a motor that sells for $950. I expect premium reliability for a premium price like that. And its pretty clear you don't get that. I think its great that you had good experience. But I can't close my eyes to problems that are clearly more common among Cyc product owners than they should be.While I agree the photon is probably not best for mr robertson, I dont understand how he is so negative on something he has no experience with directly
Take a peek at the Microshift too. Now that I have it in hand, it looks pretty good. Installing it this weekend. Can be had for right at the same price as the Sunrace. Neither Sunrace or Microshift clusters have given me even the slightest bit of trouble.Good stuff.. My current Sram cluster is coming apart with loose rivets.. The DM01 is too much for it. I will give the Sunrace solid steel a go. I appreciate the cheaper chain too.
I set run time on the "PAS - Keep Time" to its lowest time of 200ms. The adjustment is a BIG improvement to the annoying trailing assist, but there is still a bit too much trailing assist to ride wheelies or carry the front tire over anything with any confidence. As it was mentioned earlier, it also reduced assist on takeoff and lower input cadence in a negative way. If I let cadence falls below 60 or if I continued in a higher gear, assist would abruptly stop or refuse to begin assisting. It would also shut off assist intermittently when climbing at anything below 5mph. I fell off the bike 2 times while doing low speed maneuvers. The stock settings would only have this fault if I were going very slow in a tall gear while in a standing, hard pedal climb. I will unfortunately have to raise the trailing assist time and wait for the firmware cable and update to hopefully address this issue.Does anyone know which setting can shorten / shut off the trailing motor assist? I am doing too many loop outs on hard climbs, when I momentarily quit pedaling for front wheel lift, but the motor keeps assisting. Riding a wheelie or carrying the front wheel over holes is not possible with the stock settings! I found the settings for assist delay and set it to assist immediately upon pedal pressure (much better for off road control and balance with pedal input) but this can amplify the trailing assist issue. The other day when starting a ride, I hopped on and gave one pedal a good crank to get moving while in a lower gear, and did a near wipe out as trailing assist boosted the low gear bike almost past the balance point. I was not expecting that! Off road needs immediate response and immediate assist cut similar to a motorcycle. I have the LCD135C if that matters for settings menu.
Does anyone know which setting can shorten / shut off the trailing motor assist? I am doing too many loop outs on hard climbs, when I momentarily quit pedaling for front wheel lift, but the motor keeps assisting. Riding a wheelie or carrying the front wheel over holes is not possible with the stock settings! I found the settings for assist delay and set it to assist immediately upon pedal pressure (much better for off road control and balance with pedal input) but this can amplify the trailing assist issue. The other day when starting a ride, I hopped on and gave one pedal a good crank to get moving while in a lower gear, and did a near wipe out as trailing assist boosted the low gear bike almost past the balance point. I was not expecting that! Off road needs immediate response and immediate assist cut similar to a motorcycle. I have the LCD135C if that matters for settings menu.
Good call on that. Years of technical dirt bike riding have permanently taught me to use the front brake on the right hand side and the foot brake for traction control, front end loft drop on jumps and vertical wheelie management. It is so learned that I must move my mountain bicycle front brake to the right hand side, and although I have used an aux rear brake hand leaver on the left on motorcycles, its not intuitive for me to apply it there to lower a wheelie or to lower the rear wheel on a jump from that leaver.. That split second of hesitation endlessly gets me in trouble. I will keep working on it!A simple fix might be to add a motor cuttoff to one or both of your brake levers. Tap the brake to instantly shut off the motor. I did this to a TSDZ2 that I had converted to be coaster brake compatible with a solid main gear. The run on wasn't that bad but it interfered for an instant when backpedaling for braking.