Ebike commuting in the Heat Wave
I have just had a perfect four days commuting to work and back on my 2015 Haibike Yamaha. 14 miles cross country to work in the afternoon through beautiful countryside and on great tracks. Then 10 miles back home on the road in the evening.
I have enjoyed great weather and having seen the prediction for the heat wave had dragged out my 12ft by 3ft deep circular temporary pool from the shed and filled it with water. Luckily I am not on a water meter. So on my return from work it was straight in the pool to cool off. Sometimes when I had to pop to town to do some shopping before setting off to work on a different old rear hub electric bike I own I had a dip in the pool before setting off!
If you enlarge the picture above you can make out a Heron
Probably beyond the limits on the enlarge facility on my cheap digital camera
Fortunately at work I spend the majority of my time in an air conditioned environment. There is also a shower at work so I can clean up before putting my work clothes on. So 96 miles ridden pushing the total mileage on The Haibike ever higher and now standing at 13,918 miles ridden since I bought her, and still using the original battery which continues to perform very well.
Ferntastic, almost obscuring the track.
I am now formally working my three month notice to take my work pension and retire when I am 60 closing a very enjoyable chapter of ebike commuting to work and back. Although I am looking forward to not having to get up at stupid O clock in the morning or going to bed at three in the morning I will definitely miss my Ebike commute.
One interesting fact for any of you guys that travel at speed on the road on a crank drive Ebike mostly in your top gear. My experience of doing that is that it will wear out your top gear cog before the rest of the cassette.
I changed my chain at its wear limit and this time also changed my top gear cog as well as it had just started to start jumping under load but not the cassette as all other gears were working well. I had found individual cogs being sold on Ebay and that Ebay replacement top gear cog has so far completed 736 miles and extended the life of my part worn cassette by the same. The replacement chain I put on reached its wear limit very quickly in just over 400 miles and as the rear cassette and chain ring will need replacing next time I have just carried on riding and will change the whole drive system when my replacement top gear cog starts playing up. But there is no sign of that at the moment.
I have always used KMC chains, but the obvious issue from what I have said above is that in my experience all the drive train components, cassette, individual cassette cogs, jockey wheels, chain and chain ring wear at different rates and means if you run a worn out chain it will also take out the other components. However I can get a chain to the wear limit depressingly quickly as it gets dirty on my off road ride to work and then pounded home on the road when it is dirty.
Even only replacing a worn out chain once in the case above has extended the mileage of my rear cassette to 1772, rather than under a thousand if I had changed the whole cassette rather than just the top gear.
I have just had a perfect four days commuting to work and back on my 2015 Haibike Yamaha. 14 miles cross country to work in the afternoon through beautiful countryside and on great tracks. Then 10 miles back home on the road in the evening.
I have enjoyed great weather and having seen the prediction for the heat wave had dragged out my 12ft by 3ft deep circular temporary pool from the shed and filled it with water. Luckily I am not on a water meter. So on my return from work it was straight in the pool to cool off. Sometimes when I had to pop to town to do some shopping before setting off to work on a different old rear hub electric bike I own I had a dip in the pool before setting off!
If you enlarge the picture above you can make out a Heron
Probably beyond the limits on the enlarge facility on my cheap digital camera
Fortunately at work I spend the majority of my time in an air conditioned environment. There is also a shower at work so I can clean up before putting my work clothes on. So 96 miles ridden pushing the total mileage on The Haibike ever higher and now standing at 13,918 miles ridden since I bought her, and still using the original battery which continues to perform very well.
Ferntastic, almost obscuring the track.
I am now formally working my three month notice to take my work pension and retire when I am 60 closing a very enjoyable chapter of ebike commuting to work and back. Although I am looking forward to not having to get up at stupid O clock in the morning or going to bed at three in the morning I will definitely miss my Ebike commute.
One interesting fact for any of you guys that travel at speed on the road on a crank drive Ebike mostly in your top gear. My experience of doing that is that it will wear out your top gear cog before the rest of the cassette.
I changed my chain at its wear limit and this time also changed my top gear cog as well as it had just started to start jumping under load but not the cassette as all other gears were working well. I had found individual cogs being sold on Ebay and that Ebay replacement top gear cog has so far completed 736 miles and extended the life of my part worn cassette by the same. The replacement chain I put on reached its wear limit very quickly in just over 400 miles and as the rear cassette and chain ring will need replacing next time I have just carried on riding and will change the whole drive system when my replacement top gear cog starts playing up. But there is no sign of that at the moment.
I have always used KMC chains, but the obvious issue from what I have said above is that in my experience all the drive train components, cassette, individual cassette cogs, jockey wheels, chain and chain ring wear at different rates and means if you run a worn out chain it will also take out the other components. However I can get a chain to the wear limit depressingly quickly as it gets dirty on my off road ride to work and then pounded home on the road when it is dirty.
Even only replacing a worn out chain once in the case above has extended the mileage of my rear cassette to 1772, rather than under a thousand if I had changed the whole cassette rather than just the top gear.
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