Jerry told me about this site, so I'll explain where I am in my new journey to ebikes.
I've ordered a Brompton bike from NYCewheels in NYC back in April. I am unsure whether I should purchase their electric kit after seeing the range specs of the Nano. And I see there are a lot of DIY kits out there, but since I'm from the USA, well even the Nano has to be a DIY kit since electricwheels doesn't ship to the U.S. So I'm left salivating at the range specs of the Nano for the same Ah battery as the NYCewheel version. Double to triple the range! It seems too good to be true. It makes me wonder whether there's some exaggeration going on with Nano and/or whether NYCewheels is being conservative with their numbers.
Here's what NYCewheels offers.
Brompton folding bicycle | electric bike motor kit
So I've written a pros/cons list:
Pros of NYCewheels kit
- local dealer thus local 1 year warranty
- 18mph top speed
- forks are not widened/modified
- no making dropouts bigger to allow axle to fit
- working on a modular battery pack that snaps together to a 6AH to 14AH pack that can be taken apart while traveling.
Cons of NYCewheels kit
- 10Ah battery provides a mere 20 mile range (14AH at 28miles)
- Heavy motor, controller and battery (18-20lbs)
- $1895-$2095
- slow charger 5-6 hours
- can't take larger than 300watt/h batteries on U.S. flights (8.2AH x 36V is max)
Pros of Nano 2.0
- 10Ah provides 40-50 mile range @ 15mph
- 5Ah provides up to 20 miles
- Light motor and controller (10AH battery is about the same weight)
- 5Ah battery can be taken on U.S. flights
- less expensive
- fast charger option for 10ah (2 hours)
Con of Nano 2.0
- forks have to be modified/widened.
- electricwheel.co.uk doesn't ship to the USA
- figuring out where to get all the parts and putting Humpty Dumpty together.
The only thing keeping me from buying the electric kit from NYCewheels is the fact that their range of 20 miles seems to be a third to half of the range of the Nano. While it's nice that the NYCE kit goes 18mph, I would be far happier with 15mph at double the range.
Any idea why the NYCewheel version gets so much less range? They both seem to be 250 watt motors using 36 volt lithium polymer batteries.
I've ordered a Brompton bike from NYCewheels in NYC back in April. I am unsure whether I should purchase their electric kit after seeing the range specs of the Nano. And I see there are a lot of DIY kits out there, but since I'm from the USA, well even the Nano has to be a DIY kit since electricwheels doesn't ship to the U.S. So I'm left salivating at the range specs of the Nano for the same Ah battery as the NYCewheel version. Double to triple the range! It seems too good to be true. It makes me wonder whether there's some exaggeration going on with Nano and/or whether NYCewheels is being conservative with their numbers.
Here's what NYCewheels offers.
Brompton folding bicycle | electric bike motor kit
So I've written a pros/cons list:
Pros of NYCewheels kit
- local dealer thus local 1 year warranty
- 18mph top speed
- forks are not widened/modified
- no making dropouts bigger to allow axle to fit
- working on a modular battery pack that snaps together to a 6AH to 14AH pack that can be taken apart while traveling.
Cons of NYCewheels kit
- 10Ah battery provides a mere 20 mile range (14AH at 28miles)
- Heavy motor, controller and battery (18-20lbs)
- $1895-$2095
- slow charger 5-6 hours
- can't take larger than 300watt/h batteries on U.S. flights (8.2AH x 36V is max)
Pros of Nano 2.0
- 10Ah provides 40-50 mile range @ 15mph
- 5Ah provides up to 20 miles
- Light motor and controller (10AH battery is about the same weight)
- 5Ah battery can be taken on U.S. flights
- less expensive
- fast charger option for 10ah (2 hours)
Con of Nano 2.0
- forks have to be modified/widened.
- electricwheel.co.uk doesn't ship to the USA
- figuring out where to get all the parts and putting Humpty Dumpty together.
The only thing keeping me from buying the electric kit from NYCewheels is the fact that their range of 20 miles seems to be a third to half of the range of the Nano. While it's nice that the NYCE kit goes 18mph, I would be far happier with 15mph at double the range.
Any idea why the NYCewheel version gets so much less range? They both seem to be 250 watt motors using 36 volt lithium polymer batteries.
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