Hi. Thinking of getting an electric bike and found this site over the course of my research. Looks a great resource.
I'm after a bike for commuting (I'm using a cycle to work scheme, so my budget's £1000 max).
My commute would be about ten miles each way, and has a rise/fall of 174 feet (the slightly uphill journey is the evening one). The main issue is a large valley in roughly the middle of the journey (it's basically the A6 through the centre of Stockport if anyone knows that), so there's going to be a steepish climb of around 100 feet in a mile in either direction (is that steep? I always though it was on a pushbike. Apologies if it sounds a bit pathetic ).
I don't want the bike to do all the work, and I'm hoping that non-assisted pedalling on the flatter bits will give me some much needed exercise, but I just don't want to knacker myself on that middle hill!
I've always been a keen cycling commmuter in the past - used to do a 14-15 mile round trip in my 20s-30s and after changing job a 7 mile round trip in my 30s-40s, but 20 miles at my age (53) on a non-assisted bike is simply a no-no.
My research has led me to believe the Decathlon elops 900 would have enough kick to get me up those hills, and bring the commute down to well under an hour each way. They seem to have brought out a new version recently, although I've not seen it reviewed on this site (I'd be happy to rectify that if I do get one).
It did get a good review here - the review highlights the alloy frame, front suspension fork, disk brakes and a pretty powerful battery. I don't want to buy a white elephant, though - if it won't get me up the hills, it'd be pointless. Reading other comments on here, I suppose the other variable is my own weight. I'm overweight at 5' 11" and 16.5 stones (although hoping to reduce that with the exercise...).
I've seen Woosh bikes (Krieger/Bali) get decent reviews as well, but I don't think they're an approved supplier for my particular scheme.
Sorry if that's been a bit rambling, but would appreciate any thoughts people might have. A simple "yes"/"no" to the question "will that Decathlon bike get me up that hill?" would probably suffice...
I'm after a bike for commuting (I'm using a cycle to work scheme, so my budget's £1000 max).
My commute would be about ten miles each way, and has a rise/fall of 174 feet (the slightly uphill journey is the evening one). The main issue is a large valley in roughly the middle of the journey (it's basically the A6 through the centre of Stockport if anyone knows that), so there's going to be a steepish climb of around 100 feet in a mile in either direction (is that steep? I always though it was on a pushbike. Apologies if it sounds a bit pathetic ).
I don't want the bike to do all the work, and I'm hoping that non-assisted pedalling on the flatter bits will give me some much needed exercise, but I just don't want to knacker myself on that middle hill!
I've always been a keen cycling commmuter in the past - used to do a 14-15 mile round trip in my 20s-30s and after changing job a 7 mile round trip in my 30s-40s, but 20 miles at my age (53) on a non-assisted bike is simply a no-no.
My research has led me to believe the Decathlon elops 900 would have enough kick to get me up those hills, and bring the commute down to well under an hour each way. They seem to have brought out a new version recently, although I've not seen it reviewed on this site (I'd be happy to rectify that if I do get one).
It did get a good review here - the review highlights the alloy frame, front suspension fork, disk brakes and a pretty powerful battery. I don't want to buy a white elephant, though - if it won't get me up the hills, it'd be pointless. Reading other comments on here, I suppose the other variable is my own weight. I'm overweight at 5' 11" and 16.5 stones (although hoping to reduce that with the exercise...).
I've seen Woosh bikes (Krieger/Bali) get decent reviews as well, but I don't think they're an approved supplier for my particular scheme.
Sorry if that's been a bit rambling, but would appreciate any thoughts people might have. A simple "yes"/"no" to the question "will that Decathlon bike get me up that hill?" would probably suffice...