It's the law, or don't you have that in Leeds?Okay I love my 625 kathundu bike but then limiter is just plain stupid, it slows me down, I live in Leeds
If you De-restrict the bike not only will you invalidate your warranty and have an illegal bike, but you will also risk the engine going into limp mode.Okay I love my 625 kathundu bike but then limiter is just plain stupid, it slows me down, I live in Leeds does anyone know a place to get it sorted or is it better to buy the speedbox thingy?
Allegedly, plus as he already has the bike that is not going to happen, hence his warranty would be invalid.if you want a dongle and warranty buy it from ebike shop as they fit dongles and honor the warranty.
dealers nor bosch can say 100% if a dongle has been used thus why ebike shop fits and sells them with warranty. i also know another shop that does this.Allegedly, plus as he already has the bike that is not going to happen, hence his warranty would be invalid.
As I said before irrelevant as he already has the bike. I certainly wouldn't risk it on hearsay.dealers nor bosch can say 100% if a dongle has been used thus why ebike shop fits and sells them with warranty. i also know another shop that does this.
@Electric Transport ShopAs I said before irrelevant as he already has the bike. I certainly wouldn't risk it on hearsay.
Its primarily the air resistance working against you , the weight of the bike per se is almost irrelevant once moving on a flat road. Up a hill it becomes relevant but only as a combination of rider + bike weight.There is no limiter as such, particularly on bikes fitted with the recent generation Bosch motors. Once you are past 15.5Mph all effort toward forward motion is your own, but the motor itself is not working against you, just the weight of the bike itself.
I may be misinterpreting what you are saying, but when an e-bike motor cuts out at 25 KMH, as the law requires, naturally to keep going you need more muscle "input". But it should not slow down the bike at all, so do test it on a good downhill run (as someone else also suggested), and keep an eye on your Tachometer. Watch exactly what happens when the motor cuts out.Okay I love my 625 kathundu bike but then limiter is just plain stupid, it slows me down, I live in Leeds does anyone know a place to get it sorted or is it better to buy the speedbox thingy?
cheers
Of course you'll slow down. You have three forces pushing you down the hill. There's the effect of gravity on your mass (weight), your pedal force and the force the motor applies. When the motor cuts, you only have the two forces, which are less, so you slow down. That's the same whether you go up or down hills.I may be misinterpreting what you are saying, but when an e-bike motor cuts out at 25 KMH, as the law requires, naturally to keep going you need more muscle "input". But it should not slow down the bike at all, so do test it on a good downhill run (as someone else also suggested), and keep an eye on your Tachometer. Watch exactly what happens when the motor cuts out.
On a steep hill, especially if you are also pedalling, if you then slow down, your motor is doing something wrong, IMHO.
If the bike does slow down in the way you said, that to me means that the motor is not being "disengaged" from the drive system, either electrically or mechanically, or remotely possible, both.
Hopefully there is someone here that can define that possibility more accurately than I can.
Once the drive system (chain system) is turning at a faster road speed than the motor legally can, it should be somehow both mechanically and electrically, "disengaged" in some way, just like a normal bike freewheel does. Only old fashioned bikes once had a so called "fixed wheel", where the pedals MUST keep turning, because there is no "free wheel" fitted.
I myself do not like or know that much about mid motor bikes, but that is how a good hub motor reacts, when you travel faster than the motor can legally rotate at, even though on a hub it is still rotating, there is a freewheel effect......not a braking effect.
Regards
Andy
As a form of a test, I spoke of a hill, a steep hill, one that any bike will actually speed up on simply due to the forces of gravity. With or without motor assistance.Of course you'll slow down. You have three forces pushing you down the hill. There's the effect of gravity on your mass (weight), your pedal force and the force the motor applies. When the motor cuts, you only have the two forces, which are less, so you slow down. That's the same whether you go up or down hills.
On the flat or up a slight incline, when you're pedalling at a rate of about 100w with something like 200w assistance from the motor, it's going to be like hitting a wall when the motor cuts because you'll only have 1/3 as much power, which won't be enough to sustain your speed. This gives the iĺlusion of resistance or riding through treacle.
Wherever the magnet is on the spoke, the time gap between pulses will not change.Therefore moving the magnet/sensor on your existing wheel outwards will achieve the same effect, albeit by a much smaller margin. I estimated 30mm movement will increase speed assist limit by 3mph or am I missing something?
One rotation of a wheel is one rotation and therefore one pulse to the controller- whatever the wheel size. What you're missing is that the controller is already set for the wheel circumference to determine the distance travelled and also gauge the speed.I estimated 30mm movement will increase speed assist limit by 3mph or am I missing something?