The trouble is Mike, it's not simple as I've been showing. One bike might only be capable of half the hill that another can climb. Essentially they are similar, except that one has twice the power.why not call it what to look for in an electric bike THE SIMPLE ANSWER and make it prominent,
mike
But those power outputs aren't published, so telling people to look out for a high motor power won't help them, they'll still be in the dark.
We could do some calculation and give a good indication of the hill each bike could climb with a notional weight rider of notional ability. But if a buyer weighed three stones more and was much less of a rider than he thought, the hill climbing for him would be enormously compromised. Equally, a two stone lighter person than the notional rider, who was very fit in addition could substantially exceed the prediction.
The reason for these very big variations is the very low power of electric bikes, the slightest change in circumstance making a large change in result. On a small car with at least 75 times the power available at the minimum, the driver weight makes next to no difference, so car performance is predictable with much greater reliability, particularly since that's the sole power source.
The completely unknown rider power output which can be as great or greater than the hub motor's output makes electric bike prediction almost impossible.
It's like you saying to me, "Here's a car, I don't know it's weight, I don't know it's power output, and I don't know it's engine size. Now tell me what hills it can climb, how fast it can go, and how far will it travel on a gallon of petrol".
What hope do I have of telling you something reliable?
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