Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Pedelecs Electric Bike Community

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Commuter bike for hilly Bristol

Featured Replies

Hi all,

 

I'm hoping to get some advice about a good e-bike for commuting purposes in Bristol at the lower end of the price spectrum. I'm planning to use Cyclescheme for the first £1000 and am willing to add around £300 more on top of that. My key criteria are:

  • 15 mile round-trip commute with the steepest incline I'd encounter around 21%, although only that severe for short sections
  • I'd like to buy it from a local shop in Bristol which can also service it, so probably limited to what's available at Atmosphere (www.electricbikes.org.uk), Electric Bike Sales (www.electricbikesales.co.uk) or The Electric Bike Shop (www.theelectricbikeshop.co.uk) unless there are other shops I don't know about?
  • I'd prefer a brand that is likely to still be around in 5 years' time (my wife bought a Freego about a year ago which has recently gone under, so worried about parts etc. in future)
  • Disk brakes
  • A smooth ride over bumpy roads and small potholes (it will never go off-road but might go on the occasional footpath)
  • Comfy saddle
  • Would like mud guards and a rack
  • Relatively conventional looks - I'm in my mid-thirties and not looking to make a fashion statement with my bike!

One shop I went to advised that I really should spend a little extra and go for a crank motor over a hub motor as hubs were "yesterday's technology", but I'm aware that cranks are more expensive. How much of a difference does the crank motor make? Is it really that much better?

 

Here's the list of bikes I've been suggested so far:

 

Wisper 905 SE

Batribike Alpha

Gazelle Orange C7

Raleigh Captus

Cube Town/Touring Hybrid One 400 (but might be too dear at £1500)

Lapierre Overvolt Urban 100

 

Would welcome any advice/comments/suggestions you'd be able to provide! :)

Have a look in local Halfrauds ad they have Carrere Bosch drive bikes, you should get one for you £1300 upper limit, join Britih cycling for a 10% discount as well.
Hi all,

 

I'm hoping to get some advice about a good e-bike for commuting purposes in Bristol at the lower end of the price spectrum. I'm planning to use Cyclescheme for the first £1000 and am willing to add around £300 more on top of that. My key criteria are:

  • 15 mile round-trip commute with the steepest incline I'd encounter around 21%, although only that severe for short sections
  • I'd like to buy it from a local shop in Bristol which can also service it, so probably limited to what's available at Atmosphere (www.electricbikes.org.uk), Electric Bike Sales (www.electricbikesales.co.uk) or The Electric Bike Shop (www.theelectricbikeshop.co.uk) unless there are other shops I don't know about?
  • I'd prefer a brand that is likely to still be around in 5 years' time (my wife bought a Freego about a year ago which has recently gone under, so worried about parts etc. in future)
  • Disk brakes
  • A smooth ride over bumpy roads and small potholes (it will never go off-road but might go on the occasional footpath)
  • Comfy saddle
  • Would like mud guards and a rack
  • Relatively conventional looks - I'm in my mid-thirties and not looking to make a fashion statement with my bike!

One shop I went to advised that I really should spend a little extra and go for a crank motor over a hub motor as hubs were "yesterday's technology", but I'm aware that cranks are more expensive. How much of a difference does the crank motor make? Is it really that much better?

 

Here's the list of bikes I've been suggested so far:

 

Wisper 905 SE

Batribike Alpha

Gazelle Orange C7

Raleigh Captus

Cube Town/Touring Hybrid One 400 (but might be too dear at £1500)

Lapierre Overvolt Urban 100

 

Would welcome any advice/comments/suggestions you'd be able to provide! :)

Well, Juicy Bikes sell hub motor bikes, and they are in a hilly area, so should have a good idea of what they are capable of. Woosh bikes are hub motored (in the main) and sell well. EBikes Direct is a good site to look at for info as well. My personal preference is front hub motor, central battery, then you have a choice as to what sort of gearing you have in the back wheel. Paying a lot of money does not always guarantee you get more. Some bikes are over-priced, while you would not want a £400 one from EBay - you would be disappointed! Don't rush, just keep looking. If you spot one parked somewhere, try and grill the owner!

I forgot to add, go for the largest capacity battery you can afford. It will last longer, as it will not drain so quickly, plus giving you a better range.

“One shop I went to advised that I really should spend a little extra and go for a crank motor over a hub motor as hubs were "yesterday's technology"

 

I am sure that many pedelecers with hub motors would raise an eyebrow at that particular comment.

 

Post #4 may help you with the hub vs crank question:

https://www.pedelecs.co.uk/forum/threads/convert-existing-bike-or-buy-a-new-cube.33767/

 

In a hilly area I would be looking for hydraulic disc brakes and a high capacity battery.

 

The reviews for Atmosphere Electric Bikes in Bristol seem very positive. I would be inclined to have a chat with them and try a few bikes up the local hills before making a final decision.

A decent local bike shop is worth its weight in gold.

Edited by Eagle

Done 10634 miles on my Haibike sDuro Yamaha March 2015 bike that I paid £1750 for and use over 50% proper off road. 9 speed transmission cheap to replace cassettes on. Absolute beast climbing hills. Still using the original 400Wh battery working well.

 

 

 

https://www.e-bikeshop.co.uk/Electric-Bikes-UK-Dealer/Haibike-sDuro-HardSeven-1.0-2018

 

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00LGLYYRM/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o02__o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

 

 

https://www.pedelecs.co.uk/forum/threads/haibike-sduro-hardseven-sl-2015-yamaha-7-month-1600-miles.22644/

 

That having been said using your local bike shop is a wise way to go to get their support after purchase and the Oxygen Mountain bike rear hub powered bike is well regarded and powerful. The other shop sells Haibikes. Also the Raleigh Captus is well regarded though not as powerful as the other two.

 

You need to try all three and maybe others by test riding them. THat is the best way to find out how they suit you.

E-City from Jake's Bikes, an earlier model got a decent review from Dave Atkinson. The bikes are designed and assembled in Bristol. They will deliver an e-bike for you to take a test ride anywhere in Bristol or you can pop down to the shop for a fitting on a test bike set up on a roller, and choose your parts - handlebars, saddle, etc.

Edited by Dewey

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...
Background Picker
Customize Layout

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.