hi all
so, I am thinking of buying a Dahon Vigor D9 20" folder for london commuting and converting it.
Before anyone says "why not this or that ready-e-biked 20" folder" I have not found a single one (for a sensible price anyway) that has as long a virtual-top-tube frame geometry as this dahon, and I've researched and sat on / ridden a lot. The stretched "almost roadie" riding position is a requirement for me. with the addition of bar ends or aero-clamps then an aero position will be achievable.
so I am thinking rear hub motor because:
a) stealth (hiding behind the sprockets)
b) light weight - want to increase the base weight of the bike (assume battery removed) as little as possible so it remains carryable. Base weight is 11.7kg. I'm a strong chap, fine with 14-15kg on my arm and the rest in a bag over shoulder.
c) maintain gearing ratio which is 53:{11-32} and allow me to increase ring beyond 53 if I want in future. crank drives seem to come with 48 or 46 rings aimed at 26" or 700c, and adapting that seems hard/fiddly. plus the crank drive motor may well impinge on the folded state.
d) I've got the use of a borrowed whoosh crank drive 700c ebike and can't get used to needing to stop pedalling to change gear - being a keen non-assisted cyclist I am always wanting to flick the shifter to keep my cadence right and maintain the power. Assuming rear hub much more accommodating for that.
I have never been anywhere near wheelbuilding so would need a prebuilt wheel or find a builder.
the bike has a 135mm rear dropout and 9 speed cassette which I would want to maintain - a lot of kits seem to be freewheel only?
I'm also pondering on speed requirements. I have some nice flat offroad cycle paths and quiet, well surfaced bridleways so want to run at 20mph or thereabouts. The 36v motors for 20" wheel seem to be sold with around 340rpm spin speed which if I read it right comes out ~20mph? what will it do as that speed is approached or exceeded - stop pushing completely, or worse, generate drag? do I need to look at 48v so that it keeps on pushing at that speed? all the uk kits I have found seem to be 36v?
Next, battery. my range requirement is LOW (7 miles if I charge at work, 14 if I don't, all pretty flat) and again because of the folding and wanting to carry it on a train I want to keep weight down. But I am riding at max PAS, to avoid sweatiness. 10Ah should more be enough, removable and I don't want it all on the back to keep the balance of the bike better.
(again , the borrowed whoosh has a rear rack 17ah which is really heavy and unbalances it at speed/cornering, so I know I dont want that).
So I am thinking battery in a removable touring bag on the front frame-mount luggage truss (not on the bar). Just the same idea as the factory electric brompton. My plan is to remove the battery bag for each train journey and sling it over my shoulder - and so it needs to be built as light as poss and with some form of quick-connect for that reason. Most kits seem to be aimed at bottle, downtube or rack, non of which really suit. Does anyone build/sell battery packs to the general public in that bag-mount style? again do I need to go 48v?
controllers: no idea where to start.. other than if I can put it in the bag with the battery, great.
brakes: I'd like to uprate the brakes on this chap to magura HS33 hydraulic rims. Anyone "been there done that" who knows how they work with ebike cutouts - their spec says it has an "ebike switch"?
ta for any help
so, I am thinking of buying a Dahon Vigor D9 20" folder for london commuting and converting it.
Before anyone says "why not this or that ready-e-biked 20" folder" I have not found a single one (for a sensible price anyway) that has as long a virtual-top-tube frame geometry as this dahon, and I've researched and sat on / ridden a lot. The stretched "almost roadie" riding position is a requirement for me. with the addition of bar ends or aero-clamps then an aero position will be achievable.
so I am thinking rear hub motor because:
a) stealth (hiding behind the sprockets)
b) light weight - want to increase the base weight of the bike (assume battery removed) as little as possible so it remains carryable. Base weight is 11.7kg. I'm a strong chap, fine with 14-15kg on my arm and the rest in a bag over shoulder.
c) maintain gearing ratio which is 53:{11-32} and allow me to increase ring beyond 53 if I want in future. crank drives seem to come with 48 or 46 rings aimed at 26" or 700c, and adapting that seems hard/fiddly. plus the crank drive motor may well impinge on the folded state.
d) I've got the use of a borrowed whoosh crank drive 700c ebike and can't get used to needing to stop pedalling to change gear - being a keen non-assisted cyclist I am always wanting to flick the shifter to keep my cadence right and maintain the power. Assuming rear hub much more accommodating for that.
I have never been anywhere near wheelbuilding so would need a prebuilt wheel or find a builder.
the bike has a 135mm rear dropout and 9 speed cassette which I would want to maintain - a lot of kits seem to be freewheel only?
I'm also pondering on speed requirements. I have some nice flat offroad cycle paths and quiet, well surfaced bridleways so want to run at 20mph or thereabouts. The 36v motors for 20" wheel seem to be sold with around 340rpm spin speed which if I read it right comes out ~20mph? what will it do as that speed is approached or exceeded - stop pushing completely, or worse, generate drag? do I need to look at 48v so that it keeps on pushing at that speed? all the uk kits I have found seem to be 36v?
Next, battery. my range requirement is LOW (7 miles if I charge at work, 14 if I don't, all pretty flat) and again because of the folding and wanting to carry it on a train I want to keep weight down. But I am riding at max PAS, to avoid sweatiness. 10Ah should more be enough, removable and I don't want it all on the back to keep the balance of the bike better.
(again , the borrowed whoosh has a rear rack 17ah which is really heavy and unbalances it at speed/cornering, so I know I dont want that).
So I am thinking battery in a removable touring bag on the front frame-mount luggage truss (not on the bar). Just the same idea as the factory electric brompton. My plan is to remove the battery bag for each train journey and sling it over my shoulder - and so it needs to be built as light as poss and with some form of quick-connect for that reason. Most kits seem to be aimed at bottle, downtube or rack, non of which really suit. Does anyone build/sell battery packs to the general public in that bag-mount style? again do I need to go 48v?
controllers: no idea where to start.. other than if I can put it in the bag with the battery, great.
brakes: I'd like to uprate the brakes on this chap to magura HS33 hydraulic rims. Anyone "been there done that" who knows how they work with ebike cutouts - their spec says it has an "ebike switch"?
ta for any help