HiHi,
I am looking for practical advice on ebike disassembly, so I can travel within France on a touring holiday as I am hoping to do the Euro Velo 17.
Is it something that is reasonable enough to do?
Does anyone have any pointers or tips?
Thanks for that, this is great advice. I think i need to take my bike apart this evening and see if it is do-able...I'm placing a photo of the bike below for others to reference. Those dimensions mean taking out both wheels, removing the rear carrier, stand and rear mudguard and possibly lowering the saddle. Turning the handlebars into line will also make it easier to handle. It might also be necessary to remove the front mudguard to get the length within 120 cm. The handlebar to forks base will hopefully be within 90cm., but if not the forks could be compressed and tied to reduce that.
This is a big stripdown and you'll have to guard against damaging the brake disc rotors when out of their mountings and also bag and tie up the loose chain. And of course obtain a suitable bag of that size and wide enough to take the frame with wheels, packaging and other parts alongside. It will be heavy to pick up of course.
That's interesting. So they are not saying we have to send it separately by road or rail transport and you can put it on 'whole' you just have to pay extra (typically how much do they charge -eg for a 100 euro person journey?)Sorry Kate but the SNCF really wants you to pay for your bike's space on the train. Only a folder will fit in the space they have defined as "free".
TER (regional trains) have space for bikes but all the others you have to pay.
I did think it odd, as whenever I have used the trains in Switzerland, I have always had to pay for the bike as a passenger paying fare.Sorry Kate but the SNCF really wants you to pay for your bike's space on the train. Only a folder will fit in the space they have defined as "free".
TER (regional trains) have space for bikes but all the others you have to pay.
I remember taking a bike by plane to Paris in 76. What I had to do was remove the two wheels and secure them to the frame ,rotate the handle bars and deflate the tyres. No bike bags then, but it appeared on the conveyor belt along with other baggage. .. The fun was reinflating the tyres in a temperature of 37 degrees. There was no air conditioning in the arrivals hall at Orly.. (it was a student type flight), so bending to tighten a single nut or one stroke of the pump was an effort!. Of all the things I had remembered to bring, a lock was not one, and the bike was nicked an hour later,when I was in a shop buying one!!!!.I'm placing a photo of the bike below for others to reference. Those dimensions mean taking out both wheels, removing the rear carrier, stand and rear mudguard and possibly lowering the saddle. Turning the handlebars into line will also make it easier to handle. It might also be necessary to remove the front mudguard to get the length within 120 cm. The handlebar to forks base will hopefully be within 90cm., but if not the forks could be compressed and tied to reduce that.
This is a big stripdown and you'll have to guard against damaging the brake disc rotors when out of their mountings and also bag and tie up the loose chain. And of course obtain a suitable bag of that size and wide enough to take the frame with wheels, packaging and other parts alongside. It will be heavy to pick up of course.
My Orly experiences were in the early 1960s on business flights in Air France Caravelles. Those were the days to fly, when not many did. Then I could drive to Heathrow, park very close to the terminal, check in 20 minutes before boarding and come back a week later and not be bankrupted by the parking fee.I remember taking a bike by plane to Paris in 76. What I had to do was remove the two wheels and secure them to the frame ,rotate the handle bars and deflate the tyres. No bike bags then, but it appeared on the conveyor belt along with other baggage. .. The fun was reinflating the tyres in a temperature of 37 degrees. There was no air conditioning in the arrivals hall at Orly.. (it was a student type flight), so bending to tighten a single nut or one stroke of the pump was an effort!. Of all the things I had remembered to bring, a lock was not one, and the bike was nicked an hour later,when I was in a shop buying one!!!!.