Chancelucky2
Well-Known Member
For some time, I've been planning to do a credit card tour from the RTP area in North Carolina to Knoxville, Tennessee (roughly 350 miles according to Boogle maps' bike routes). I'm hoping to average a little over 70 miles/day and will be relatively lightly loaded (tools, change of clothes or two, various electronic items, water, snacks, and second battery). Right now, I'm waiting for Social Distancing and travel restricitons to end, hopefully some time before it gets really hot.
Anyway, as I've been doing trial rides, I've been trying to stay in eco as much as I can to maximize distance. I've only used tour for relatively long hills on the way home. Some of that is a carryover from the fact that my first e-bike only had a single 400wh Bosch battery. Range on tour wasn't terrible, but it wasn't going to work. I now have a bike with 2 Bosch 500 wh batteries and better range in general (drop bars, thinner tires). I can actually do 75 miles in tour with the 2 batteries, at least until I hit the mountains. In any case, I'd likely still do some of it in eco and with the motor off. I'm also finding that it's really not my lungs and legs that wear out, it's my rear, hands, and back. Yes, I know about suspension seat posts, etc.
It seems like going faster and letting the e-bike be an e-bike rather than preserving every last watt might make more sense. For those with multiple batteries who have toured, are you hypermiling or minimizing time in the saddle?
Anyway, as I've been doing trial rides, I've been trying to stay in eco as much as I can to maximize distance. I've only used tour for relatively long hills on the way home. Some of that is a carryover from the fact that my first e-bike only had a single 400wh Bosch battery. Range on tour wasn't terrible, but it wasn't going to work. I now have a bike with 2 Bosch 500 wh batteries and better range in general (drop bars, thinner tires). I can actually do 75 miles in tour with the 2 batteries, at least until I hit the mountains. In any case, I'd likely still do some of it in eco and with the motor off. I'm also finding that it's really not my lungs and legs that wear out, it's my rear, hands, and back. Yes, I know about suspension seat posts, etc.
It seems like going faster and letting the e-bike be an e-bike rather than preserving every last watt might make more sense. For those with multiple batteries who have toured, are you hypermiling or minimizing time in the saddle?