What rides have the rest of you been doing?
Back to what my Haibike has done for over six years now, taking me cross country to work, for these late shifts setting of at around 2:00Pm, on a route of between 12 and 16 miles, and then a 10 mile road ride home late at night.
I have really enjoyed these Spring rides in mostly bright clear sunshine. There have been some big temperature changes between the ride to work in the afternoon and the ride home after midnight.
I have been in danger of being too warm on the ride to work on occasion in a long sleeved thermal top, cheap wool style gloves, and leggings, but was kept from overheating by a little nip in the wind.
Going home I have needed proper protection from sub zero temperatures. So wind proof jacket and over trousers, thermal top, leggings,balaclava, winter gloves, and hat.
The shifts have been broken up with two consecutive rides to work and back on
Monday and
Tuesday, two days off, another ride on
Friday, a short ride to my local station and back yesterday (
Saturday) ,to use the train to get to work, off today and my last late shift of this set tomorrow which should mean a lovely cross country ride to work.
I can vary my route to work a bit, so 12 miles on Monday, 14 miles on Tuesday, and 16 miles on Friday, so 72 miles in total with the 10 mile ride home added.
So the total mileage of my 2015 Yamaha crank drive Haibike continues to rise with 13,286 miles now ridden, 7,286 on the second motor and still using the original 400Wh battery.
Spot the fleeing Deer.
Getting more miles out of my cassette.....
My Haibike does around 14 miles to work cross country getting my transmission dirty, and then I ride 10 miles home on the road.
My faster ride home using higher assist levels with a dirty chain and cassette a lot of the time in my highest gear 9 that has 12 teeth can mean that I wear this gear out quite quickly.
Previously this has meant changing the whole cassette.
I had in the past looked on ebay to try and buy just this top gear cog but not found any individual cogs.
I had a look again in February this year and bingo, someone is now selling them, so I ordered one.
It took a week or two to come and almost as soon as it had arrived my chain reached its wear limit and my top gear 12 tooth cog started to show the first signs of jumping, after a winter of dirty transmission commuting.
So at the beginning of March, rather than changing the chain and the cassette I changed the chain, cleaned the cassette and replaced just the 12 tooth top gear cog.
The replacement top gear 12 tooth cost £3.43 delivered. Now knowing that I can change it means that I do not need to nurse it quite so much and can push more power through it if I want to.
So far, so good, just replacing the top gear cog rather than the whole cassette is working well with now 175 miles ridden extending the life of the cassette.