HI,
Very happy to find this forum, then this thread and see that it’s up to date...
I’m currently juggling a Swytch eco kit and an EasiFit kit.
Swytch is now on my bike (cotic roadrat) as there was not way on earth a cadence PAS would on dad’s carbon trek road bike- fat tubes and no gaps anywhere.
Enter EasyFit... not the most catchy of names but, found them on DuckDuckGo on Thursday. Emailed an enquiry at midnight. Reply Friday 8am. phone call. Ordered Friday 1pm, delivered Saturday 3pm. 90 mins from delivery to fitted and working.
Just to see, I did it using only the supplied tools. All I needed to add was a pump, more long cable ties (very fat tubes).
I can clarify some of the queries above.
The gyroscope is in the controller circuitry that lives in the bottom of the battery bottle. It’s not in the motor hub.
I strongly suspect it’s actually a gyroscope/accelerometer board - generic part in every Android and iPhone, as well as all 6DOF VR headsets.
You have to calibrate it on really flat ground, with the bike held upright (as in ready to ride, not leaning against a wal).
If you later reposition the bottle motor/controller unit you have to recalibrate or it won’t know where ‘flat’ is.
You need a reasonable charge in the battery bottle and the BT thumb controller for this setup/config to work...
Response is indeed a bit laggy, but takes very little getting used to. The pickup delay when you start pedalling is enough to stop the bike jumping away, and if you want to gun it at a traffic light the thumb throttle is near-instant.
Motor cutoff delay when you stop pedalling is less ideal: you wind up braking against the motor for a moment. That’s ok once you get used to it. Dad’s bike has fairly average side pull road brakes and it all just works.
You can also dial down the e-assist power very quickly if you site the controller in the right place.
Pedal assist auto power increase on hills works really smoothly, as does the cutoff when you hit a downhill.
The supplied rim is pretty decent. matte black rim/spokes/motor
Wheel seems well built. Kenda tyre with some tread pattern. Schrader valve.
Motor made some slightly alarming sounds at first (cghcghcchmmmmmmeekbrrrr...) but stopped after 10 miles. My guess is lubricant needed redistributing after months in a container. Now it just does a reasonable sounding whine with the odd muffled click on power take-up/cutoff/major level change. So that’ll be the brushless motor noise and the planetary gears shifting.
It’s very neat looking, battery obv won’t compete with a 500Ah Panasonic but then it doesn’t cost £500....
And it really is only 1 wire to connect up. I like
Very happy to find this forum, then this thread and see that it’s up to date...
I’m currently juggling a Swytch eco kit and an EasiFit kit.
Swytch is now on my bike (cotic roadrat) as there was not way on earth a cadence PAS would on dad’s carbon trek road bike- fat tubes and no gaps anywhere.
Enter EasyFit... not the most catchy of names but, found them on DuckDuckGo on Thursday. Emailed an enquiry at midnight. Reply Friday 8am. phone call. Ordered Friday 1pm, delivered Saturday 3pm. 90 mins from delivery to fitted and working.
Just to see, I did it using only the supplied tools. All I needed to add was a pump, more long cable ties (very fat tubes).
I can clarify some of the queries above.
The gyroscope is in the controller circuitry that lives in the bottom of the battery bottle. It’s not in the motor hub.
I strongly suspect it’s actually a gyroscope/accelerometer board - generic part in every Android and iPhone, as well as all 6DOF VR headsets.
You have to calibrate it on really flat ground, with the bike held upright (as in ready to ride, not leaning against a wal).
If you later reposition the bottle motor/controller unit you have to recalibrate or it won’t know where ‘flat’ is.
You need a reasonable charge in the battery bottle and the BT thumb controller for this setup/config to work...
Response is indeed a bit laggy, but takes very little getting used to. The pickup delay when you start pedalling is enough to stop the bike jumping away, and if you want to gun it at a traffic light the thumb throttle is near-instant.
Motor cutoff delay when you stop pedalling is less ideal: you wind up braking against the motor for a moment. That’s ok once you get used to it. Dad’s bike has fairly average side pull road brakes and it all just works.
You can also dial down the e-assist power very quickly if you site the controller in the right place.
Pedal assist auto power increase on hills works really smoothly, as does the cutoff when you hit a downhill.
The supplied rim is pretty decent. matte black rim/spokes/motor
Wheel seems well built. Kenda tyre with some tread pattern. Schrader valve.
Motor made some slightly alarming sounds at first (cghcghcchmmmmmmeekbrrrr...) but stopped after 10 miles. My guess is lubricant needed redistributing after months in a container. Now it just does a reasonable sounding whine with the odd muffled click on power take-up/cutoff/major level change. So that’ll be the brushless motor noise and the planetary gears shifting.
It’s very neat looking, battery obv won’t compete with a 500Ah Panasonic but then it doesn’t cost £500....
And it really is only 1 wire to connect up. I like