The difficulty seems to me that they haven't yet grasped the notion that the brakes are supposed to actually stop the bike quicker than putting your shoe against the tyre, hence in the link provided timid Tim was talking about attaining the staggering velocity of 10MPH.There are two major problems I see with an e-Brompton: can it be kept light enough for the normal carrying stance? -12kg -13kg is possibly the limit, and secondly, the world is moving towards £1000 e-bike, folding or not.
I fear they have left it too late to make any significant impact.
Me too, this could be disappointing. One thing that concerned me about Will Butler-Adams comments earlier was him saying the motor assists with 20 to 30% of the power needed. That's only an Eco level, making it lower powered than anything else on the market. No doubt that's to keep its weight minimal, but there comes a point of low power where having e-assist isn't worth the added cost and complexity.With all that development time and help from Formula 1 designers, I was expecting something like the Gocycle with a bespoke motor, but with a better folding mechanism.
Hi DaveAll that time for that! I'm the eternal sceptic, so I hope I'm wrong, but that just looks like a copy of Jerrysimon's idea, but with a crappier motor (Crystalyte NSM direct drive?). Jerry offered to help them, but they welched out at the last moment. they could have had that 5 years ago.
With all that development time and help from Formula 1 designers, I was expecting something like the Gocycle with a bespoke motor, but with a better folding mechanism.
I hope that video is just a bit of misdirection and just shows an early prototype. Surely, that's not the actual bike? When I used to teach product design at secondary school, the kids would come up with designs like that in a few hours with a bit of prompting. 9 years for that???
I guess we'll have to wait for the price, but I could knock up a better attempt than that in an afternoon with my mate's 3D printer, a Q85 motor, an S06S controller and a hundred quid's worth of cells from Ebay for a total cost of about £300 retail and probably half the weight, plus you wouldn't need that ridiculous bag thing on the front.
Hi Dave
I totally agree with you. I wish you would come up something rather than front hub motor.
On the other hand, have you seen q83 motor? It is on BMSB but you need to buy 100 to place the order. It seems a good fit for brompton as the width is 73mm
https://bmsbattery.com/home/843-q83-36v250w-front-driving-ebike-hub-motor.html
Pat
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He's around, Andrew Ritchie is still the technical director of Brompton at 70 years old, having stepped down in 2005 from being El Supremo. I don't think he's interested in too much involvement these days though, under Will Butler-Adams they're now over three times the size they were in 2005.I am 72 and would quite likely die of old age if I waited for Brompton to do anything innovative, why don't they ask the original designer to have a go (if he's still available)
Yes, they've always taken a tough line, and dealers have to be satisfied with a below par profit markup. They can't really protest though, any bike shop worthy of the name has to have the Brompton brand.I am not keen on their practises in terms of strict control and treatment of shops that sell their product. I guess its all about profit and maintaining their brand and certainly no one can deny that they have achieved that.
Only a front or middle motor is possible because of the hub gears. I guess that derailleur gears would get knocked out of line too much when folding and carrying.Hi Dave
I totally agree with you. I wish you would come up something rather than front hub motor.
On the other hand, have you seen q83 motor? It is on BMSB but you need to buy 100 to place the order. It seems a good fit for brompton as the width is 73mm
Pat
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It's the one folder that can easily be carried onto buses, trains and even on planes as hand luggage, while still having good rideability. That's their expertise, if trying to make full size bikes they wouldn't be able to offer anything worthwhile against the established brands.They only make one bike, they have no plans to make any others the article says, does that not limit their potential market?
I personally do not like these small bikes, in traffic I wouldn't feel safe and they remind me of children's toys but to each their own.