Hmmm, I am still not getting it. I think your missunderstanding me. I am not talking about a perpetual thing, just a system that uses the wheels and crank to make leccy that goes back in. Even if it was say 5% it would still increase the range before the leccy runs out on the battery.
Please can someone explain in real simple terms. Imagine I am a 10 year old and not 45
One way to explain it is this. Imagine you are trundling along on the flat under throttle only. You are using the full 250 watts.
Also, you have a 250 watt generator in the front hub, so you switch it on. Now you have an engine pushing forwards with 250 watts and a generator pushing backwards with 250 watts, so the bike comes to a halt. The problem is that the generator is not 100% efficient, so you don't get back what you have put in.
So, if you settle for a generator making only 20 watts, the bike will still go forwards only slower, but it is still using 250 watts and maybe, because of the losses, only recovering 15 watts, so rather than extending range, you reduce range.
Regenerative braking is used going down hills when you are freewheeling, in this case, instead of continually speeding up, the bike goes as if the brakes are lightly applied. Because of losses, the amount of electricity recovered is minimal. Worse still, if you are crossing a valley and the downhill is followed by an uphill, you will have lost velocity.