Electric three wheel bikes

electric.mike

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 16, 2007
342
49
grimsby
Its nice to be able to come back when I need something.;)


I have a situation building where my wife and I are going to need transport as well as our car,my wife has a slight balance problem,wrist,shoulder and now gout problems,i have walking problems.


I would like to think a couple of two wheel electric bikes would fit the bill but I know they will not we already have them,so have been looking at the electric trikes.


Over the years I have read about the inherent instability issues with these but just wonder how bad this is if they are used sensibly at speeds up to 6-8mph.


I have noticed that elderly people (like us) are using them in the larger shops,precincts and pedestrian areas like invalid scooters,which is basicly what I would want them for.


Invalid scooters are out of the question,my late wife used one for her last few years and getting it in and out of the house was nearly too much for me,that was twenty years ago so I dont think it will be any better now.


Any thoughts would be appreciated


Mike
 

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
20,340
16,858
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
Hi Mike,

We convert a few trikes in the past using the Bafang BBS01.
 
  • Like
Reactions: electric.mike

Electric Transport Shop

Official Trade Member
Aug 7, 2010
156
57
Hi Mike, we have new trike that a customer traded in through one of our shops. If you let me have your email I can send you a pic. Eddie on Sales@electricbikesales.co.uk We could get it to our York store for collection and support it from there.
 

electric.mike

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 16, 2007
342
49
grimsby
  • Offensive Language
Reactions: Cerne Giant

Emo Rider

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 10, 2014
659
414
To answer your question, instead of trying to sell you a trike, yes trikes are difficult to operate on uneven surfaces. I have built 20" and 24" e-trikes and neither were easy to ride. I am an able bodied person and even for me it takes a fair bit of balance and upper body strenght to control one. If you had the luxury of being able to stay on flat level ground, they are great. But on your average pavement they are a challenge for anyone that may have balance or upper body strenght issues.

Having said that, I do not know your circumstances. My best suggestion is to find one to try. It doesn't need to powered to find out if it will work for you. There are trikes that lean in the front, like a regular bike but I do not know of any powered versions. Hope this helps and good luck with your search :)
 
  • Informative
Reactions: electric.mike

anotherkiwi

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 26, 2015
7,845
5,786
The European Union
@Emo Rider you are talking about delta or tadpole?
 

Emo Rider

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 10, 2014
659
414
@Emo Rider you are talking about delta or tadpole?
Not exactly. I saw one advertised about three years ago and all I know it it was red. It looked like a normal trike but the front half leaned left and right. The tadpole is a recumbant trike, if I am not mistaken, and all the wheels lean as you turn. Is this correct? Is there an electric version?
 

D8ve

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 30, 2013
2,142
1,294
Bristol
Delta is two wheels a the back.
Tadpole is two wheels at the front.
Going recumbent makes it much more stable.
Tilting three wheelers are rare.
Any bike can be powered including recumbents.
 

Barnaby81

Finding my (electric) wheels
Dec 27, 2016
6
2
42
London
I'm a tricycle enthusiast and have fitted electric motors to a lot of things. i only use recumbent tadpoles trikes but my friends have delta's and i have ridden most of them. equally i only recommend tadpoles for the tippiness factor of delta's (HASE Kettwiesel excluded) at any speed.

as long as you don't want to actually go into shops i would recommend one to you too. i use mine as a car replacement and go through pedestrian area's. i go on the road instead of the pavement because of the speed but you might well get away with it. your going to be 2.5 feet wide and long though. no reason you couldn't (like me) use the motor and go at standard cycle speed on the road until you get to the pedestrian area where you go slow.

tadpole recumbent trikes are solid as a rock stabilitywise and can be quite easy to get into if you can get on a standard bicycle you can get on a recumbent.

There is always a but isn't there and that's the price. its not going to be cheap. HP Velotechnik makes the Scorpion Plus 26 that you can buy with a motor. you can pick up 'standard' tadpole trikes on ebay and fit a motor for a lot lot less

I have always thought that they make the perfect mobility vehicle and with batteries the way they are you can go for miles and miles and miles
 
  • Agree
Reactions: D8ve

electric.mike

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jan 16, 2007
342
49
grimsby
Thanks for the input every one,if i go ahead it will be what i call a standard trike as in the image attached.
I need to try it as we would be talking pottering speed both my wife and i would be retired and rushing anywhere would not happen :D,we would both be happy at walking speed or just above.

s-l1600.jpg
 

Woosh

Trade Member
May 19, 2012
20,340
16,858
Southend on Sea
wooshbikes.co.uk
Interesting,why do you opt for that rather than a wheel motor
We did what the customers asked.

The BBS01 kit gives high torque at low speed, very useful.
 
  • Like
Reactions: electric.mike