the Zephyr-B uses the same 6/7/8 speed standard chain that gets fitted into 8 out of 10 bikes, same on your Zehyr CDN. I guess you need 8 more links than the 114 or 116 standard length to accommodate 52T against the standard 44T chainring but anything between 120 to 126 would work.
The front suspension on the Zephyr-B is much better than on the Big Bear. The preload adjust is useful. Only take a minute or so to set it to give about the same response as my Rockshox. The rear suspension works OK. The suspension on the B is so much better than on the CDN. You can actually hop small kerbs and nothing rattles.
Range issue: the B comes with a beautifully made aluminium cased battery. It's so light that I wondered what was inside, the label just says Samsung besides some random technical bits. I suspect it just means Samsung cells. It says 36V 10AH 360WH on the label. I expect the average pedaller to get 30 miles out of it. So for longer trips, you may want to get a second battery. To take the battery out, you fold the bike in half, insert key, turn key to unlock and the silver case battery actually glides out with virtually no effort at all. The charging socket is next to the battery lock, on the underside. The controller is also hidden inside the frame, so well away from rain.
The Zephyr-B feels like somewhere between the Big Bear and a German made bike, unfortunately still nearer to the Big Bear.
http://wooshbikes.co.uk/?zephyr-b
Battery:
The front suspension on the Zephyr-B is much better than on the Big Bear. The preload adjust is useful. Only take a minute or so to set it to give about the same response as my Rockshox. The rear suspension works OK. The suspension on the B is so much better than on the CDN. You can actually hop small kerbs and nothing rattles.
Range issue: the B comes with a beautifully made aluminium cased battery. It's so light that I wondered what was inside, the label just says Samsung besides some random technical bits. I suspect it just means Samsung cells. It says 36V 10AH 360WH on the label. I expect the average pedaller to get 30 miles out of it. So for longer trips, you may want to get a second battery. To take the battery out, you fold the bike in half, insert key, turn key to unlock and the silver case battery actually glides out with virtually no effort at all. The charging socket is next to the battery lock, on the underside. The controller is also hidden inside the frame, so well away from rain.
The Zephyr-B feels like somewhere between the Big Bear and a German made bike, unfortunately still nearer to the Big Bear.
http://wooshbikes.co.uk/?zephyr-b
Battery:
Last edited: