I wasn't sure in which section to post this, but following on from an earlier post I thought this as good a place as any.
I use my Ancheer MTB for day to day running around, for rides with friends on the weekend, I use my old Raleigh fitted with a Cyclotricity front wheel kit.
The bike :-
A single battery (11 Ah rear rack mounted) is sufficient for 90% of Sunday ride outs with my buddies.
I've covered 50 miles with 2000ft of climbing on a full charge. I've also run out of power at 44 miles with 3000ft of climbing, so for the longer rides a second battery would give me peace of mind.
I'm just not fit enough (too old ?) to haul 25+ Kg up the Welsh hills!
Last Sunday, a longer ride was planned, so the second battery (7 Ah bottle) was fitted to the downtube, wired up in parallel with the other, following the excellent advice from this board.
A total of 58 miles with 3200ft of climbing through the Brecon Beacons.
Photo below taken by me at the Crai reservoir.
The batteries performed faultlessly, when I got home there were 3 (out of 4) green lights showing on the smaller battery, and 1 (out of 3) on the larger battery, both battery voltages were the same (of course) at 37v.
I'm guessing enough for another 10+ miles?.
You must be wondering where this is going:-
When cruising downhill at 20mph the front end shimmies like crazy with little weight on the bars, it doesn't feel dangerous, but it is a little disconcerting to say the least.
25Kg bike + my 75Kg = 100Kg all up weight.
Maximum speed achieved 41mph - stable as a rock.
28mm tyres adjusted by the book to 100psi rear 60psi front = shimmy, 100psi rear 80psi front = shimmy.
Steering head bearing is adjusted correctly, the front wheel is true and balanced.
Remove downtube battery, no shimmy
Remove rack battery, no shimmy.
Go figure.
This is more of an observation than a question, according to Sheldon Shacket, bike guru, heavy front wheels can make an existing problem worse. What better reason do I need for a new project?.
Pete.
I use my Ancheer MTB for day to day running around, for rides with friends on the weekend, I use my old Raleigh fitted with a Cyclotricity front wheel kit.
The bike :-
A single battery (11 Ah rear rack mounted) is sufficient for 90% of Sunday ride outs with my buddies.
I've covered 50 miles with 2000ft of climbing on a full charge. I've also run out of power at 44 miles with 3000ft of climbing, so for the longer rides a second battery would give me peace of mind.
I'm just not fit enough (too old ?) to haul 25+ Kg up the Welsh hills!
Last Sunday, a longer ride was planned, so the second battery (7 Ah bottle) was fitted to the downtube, wired up in parallel with the other, following the excellent advice from this board.
A total of 58 miles with 3200ft of climbing through the Brecon Beacons.
Photo below taken by me at the Crai reservoir.
The batteries performed faultlessly, when I got home there were 3 (out of 4) green lights showing on the smaller battery, and 1 (out of 3) on the larger battery, both battery voltages were the same (of course) at 37v.
I'm guessing enough for another 10+ miles?.
You must be wondering where this is going:-
When cruising downhill at 20mph the front end shimmies like crazy with little weight on the bars, it doesn't feel dangerous, but it is a little disconcerting to say the least.
25Kg bike + my 75Kg = 100Kg all up weight.
Maximum speed achieved 41mph - stable as a rock.
28mm tyres adjusted by the book to 100psi rear 60psi front = shimmy, 100psi rear 80psi front = shimmy.
Steering head bearing is adjusted correctly, the front wheel is true and balanced.
Remove downtube battery, no shimmy
Remove rack battery, no shimmy.
Go figure.
This is more of an observation than a question, according to Sheldon Shacket, bike guru, heavy front wheels can make an existing problem worse. What better reason do I need for a new project?.
Pete.
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