No that's a good point, we will try as soon as it stops raining!I would expect the centre drive to have the edge when used with large sprockets, not small ones. Did you do that comparison when cycling uphill with a large sprocket?
No worries at all, your contributions are excellent and unbiased.Let me apologise to David firstly, this is not the place to talk about what we do .
It's great to see companies working with each other like this rather then taking snipes at each other all the time, like some companies and our politicians seem to do.No worries at all, your contributions are excellent and unbiased.
It is, although the companies on here have had their moments.It's great to see companies working with each other like this rather then taking snipes at each other all the time, like some companies and our politicians seem to do.
Perhaps I should put my CX motor into a pillow case next time I put it in the washer.anything with a few hundred amps will do
In that case, every company in Britain could simply import their stuff and stick a British flag on it. They wouldn't need to make anything in UK.Wasn't the flag denoting a British company rather then a bike built in Britain ?
the support is. Since anti-dumping on Chinese e-bikes, I have to assemble my own bikes in Southend though.In that case, every company in Britain could simply import their stuff and stick a British flag on it. They wouldn't need to make anything in UK.
maybe your rear hub motor was a direct drive, which is not suitable for commuting bikes.The rear hub was very heavy, with the weight in the wrong place, puncture repair is a pain, the feeling of being pushed is not as natural as a crank drive, and I get much better range on a crank drive.
My rear hub was an ebay cheapie, I fitted it on my Orange P7(yes I know a crime), and did over 2000 trouble free miles. It introduced me to ebiking. It was OK on the roads, but off road when the rpm got too low it was no use. So perhaps not really fair to compare with the Bafang, which has also done 2000 trouble free miles.maybe your rear hub motor was a direct drive, which is not suitable for commuting bikes.
My Faro has the Aikema 13.0 rear hub motor which weighs 2kgs on its own and climbs hills well. The whole bike weighs only 17 kgs, with Maxxis Detonator 23x700 tyres, much more suitable for commuting.
Yes it would commute well, but I do not commute. I purchased the Bafang from you, and it has worked well, yes I know I voided the warranty by messing with the motor parameters. I have punished and abused this unit through rocky trails, deep water, steep long climbs, 18 amps on controller. The motor gets covered in insulating mud and grass and never fails,(Yet).Your Bafang would do very well on a commuting bike, just a little more expensive.
More of crime to have it sat in a shed unused, like so many mountain bikes.I fitted it on my Orange P7(yes I know a crime)
if you convert using a front hub motor, it needs to be lightweight not to break the fork's jaws through inertia (if and when you hit a pothole). The XF07 weighs 2.8kgs. 48V motors tend to be weightier, you would need to install torque arms.Thinking about the comments on hub motors not being so good for hills where extra torque is needed compared to crank drives, why is it that so few appear to be available at 48V compared to 36V? If 48V is so good why is it not more commonly used? I read a previous thread comparing the TSDZ2 at both voltages and saying 48V was night and day different. Why is say the XF07 or XF08 supplised at 36V if extra voltage would make a big difference to its usability?