Hi all,
I wonder if you could kindly offer some advice?
I'm currently commuting on a Dahon Glide (mainly because I can stick it behind my office door rather than using the bike sheds). My commute is 25-28 miles each way but I generally tend to take the bike on the train into work (the early trains are quieter) and then cycle home avoiding the busier afternoon/evening trains. There are a couple lumps along the way but I wouldn't call it hilly. Brighton to Eastbourne via Lewes for those that know the area. I'd imagine I want enough battery capacity to do at least half again a commute to allow for capacity loss over time and for cold weather as I expect I'll be riding through the winter if I can, does getting something with a nominal range of ~40 miles sound sufficient?
I'll be riding in all weathers too so whatever I get needs to cope with possibly heavy rain.
The problems are that I'm a bit too slow and the Dahon is very sit-up and beg which into a headwind is a bit too much like hard work, luckily the prevailing wind tends to be against me in the morning and with me on the way home but not always.
I was looking around at kits to convert to a front wheel hub, I'd like to keep the current rear wheel as the internal gears are nice and out of the elements. I was originally looking at kits from https://electric-bike-conversions.co.uk when a chance comment somewhere made me have a check - it turns out the Dahon fork isn't 100mm wide. A quick poke with a ruler with the wheel in place puts the dropouts at somewhere between 70 and 80mm. I will whip the wheel out tonight and get a more accurate measurement.
I did then after finding this place have a read around and discovered Woosh Bikes, I see that they do a Brompton kit built around the Cute Q70 hub (https://wooshbikes.co.uk/?hubkits#q70kit) so I have thought of either getting it built into a 24" rim or buying it as is and re-rimming it myself. However I have been told that the motor speed is optimised for the 16" Brompton size and that it won't work well in a 24" wheel and is liable to get damaged. However one shop page for the Q70 hub elsewhere (and can I find it again?!) says the Q70 in either 201RPM or 328RPM is often used for 24" wheels (it had a range of wheel sizes for each RPM and there was an overlap at 24") so I'm thoroughly confused.
I have found found Vekkit kits that do a 74mm 24" wheel version which is quite a neat package (https://vekkit.com/products/folding-ebike-kit) and would mount on the Rixen and Kaul mount I already have fitted on the front end. And the wireless sensor and control are quite neat so we just end up with the one wire from battery pack to motor. However by the time I pick the larger battery etc it adds up to nearly £750 which is a fair chunk more than the Woosh for example at ~£550.
I guess what I'm asking is would the Woosh kit not work re-rimmed and failing that how much of a ready done premium am I paying if I go for a Vekkit? I expect I could do it more cheaply myself but how much more cheaply is the question? For the sake of warranty and a known set of bits that work happily with each other rather than needing troubleshooting and head scratching.
Out of interest I read that the legal UK motor limit is 250W, can a larger motor be used if it's "restricted" or is 250W absolutely the limit? Is there even any benefit to a larger motor if kept to 250W/15mph? If I do go homebrew I'd rather have everything neat and legal as I'll be doing a lot of miles and it's just plain simpler to avoid any potential worries.
Sorry that's all a bit of a wall o' text. I think I've covered the salient points though and any advice would be appreciated. Do ask clarification questions if anything hasn't made sense.
I wonder if you could kindly offer some advice?
I'm currently commuting on a Dahon Glide (mainly because I can stick it behind my office door rather than using the bike sheds). My commute is 25-28 miles each way but I generally tend to take the bike on the train into work (the early trains are quieter) and then cycle home avoiding the busier afternoon/evening trains. There are a couple lumps along the way but I wouldn't call it hilly. Brighton to Eastbourne via Lewes for those that know the area. I'd imagine I want enough battery capacity to do at least half again a commute to allow for capacity loss over time and for cold weather as I expect I'll be riding through the winter if I can, does getting something with a nominal range of ~40 miles sound sufficient?
I'll be riding in all weathers too so whatever I get needs to cope with possibly heavy rain.
The problems are that I'm a bit too slow and the Dahon is very sit-up and beg which into a headwind is a bit too much like hard work, luckily the prevailing wind tends to be against me in the morning and with me on the way home but not always.
I was looking around at kits to convert to a front wheel hub, I'd like to keep the current rear wheel as the internal gears are nice and out of the elements. I was originally looking at kits from https://electric-bike-conversions.co.uk when a chance comment somewhere made me have a check - it turns out the Dahon fork isn't 100mm wide. A quick poke with a ruler with the wheel in place puts the dropouts at somewhere between 70 and 80mm. I will whip the wheel out tonight and get a more accurate measurement.
I did then after finding this place have a read around and discovered Woosh Bikes, I see that they do a Brompton kit built around the Cute Q70 hub (https://wooshbikes.co.uk/?hubkits#q70kit) so I have thought of either getting it built into a 24" rim or buying it as is and re-rimming it myself. However I have been told that the motor speed is optimised for the 16" Brompton size and that it won't work well in a 24" wheel and is liable to get damaged. However one shop page for the Q70 hub elsewhere (and can I find it again?!) says the Q70 in either 201RPM or 328RPM is often used for 24" wheels (it had a range of wheel sizes for each RPM and there was an overlap at 24") so I'm thoroughly confused.
I have found found Vekkit kits that do a 74mm 24" wheel version which is quite a neat package (https://vekkit.com/products/folding-ebike-kit) and would mount on the Rixen and Kaul mount I already have fitted on the front end. And the wireless sensor and control are quite neat so we just end up with the one wire from battery pack to motor. However by the time I pick the larger battery etc it adds up to nearly £750 which is a fair chunk more than the Woosh for example at ~£550.
I guess what I'm asking is would the Woosh kit not work re-rimmed and failing that how much of a ready done premium am I paying if I go for a Vekkit? I expect I could do it more cheaply myself but how much more cheaply is the question? For the sake of warranty and a known set of bits that work happily with each other rather than needing troubleshooting and head scratching.
Out of interest I read that the legal UK motor limit is 250W, can a larger motor be used if it's "restricted" or is 250W absolutely the limit? Is there even any benefit to a larger motor if kept to 250W/15mph? If I do go homebrew I'd rather have everything neat and legal as I'll be doing a lot of miles and it's just plain simpler to avoid any potential worries.
Sorry that's all a bit of a wall o' text. I think I've covered the salient points though and any advice would be appreciated. Do ask clarification questions if anything hasn't made sense.