Not news I know, but I wanted to share what differences I've noticed in my bikes, one electric one not, when pedalling unassisted:
MTB: springy front suspension, fat 26"x1.9/2.0" smooth tyres speed 13-14mph
Torq1: rigid forks, front hub motor, 700Cx38 smooth tyres speed 16-17mph
(both aluminium framed, MTB ~15kg, Schwalbe tyres on each - Silento II on MTB & Marathon plus on Torq, similar pressures on each bike)
I suspect both the fat tyres and springy front forks mainly sap the rider energy & speed, although the 700C wheels will roll a bit easier anyway, I'm unclear which saps most energy though or whether there are other factors involved, but I'm struck how much easier it is to pedal a hub motor bike with its gear friction than a front suspension, fat tyre MTB.
My main thought is that, for ebikes pedalled at 15mph, such a speed/energy efficiency difference would markedly decrease range from the same battery, maybe even 20% or so less, unless the less efficient one is ridden more slowly, so clearly a trade-off between comfort and speed/range.
Front suspension forks are probably much better now than my old MTB ones, but the effect is still there presumably. Forks which lock out will help, but add to the weight, and a hard ride when locked out especially if on the front with a hub motor too.
Has anyone else also noticed similarly high losses from suspension or oversized tyres, compared to other, more efficient, bikes?
Stuart.
MTB: springy front suspension, fat 26"x1.9/2.0" smooth tyres speed 13-14mph
Torq1: rigid forks, front hub motor, 700Cx38 smooth tyres speed 16-17mph
(both aluminium framed, MTB ~15kg, Schwalbe tyres on each - Silento II on MTB & Marathon plus on Torq, similar pressures on each bike)
I suspect both the fat tyres and springy front forks mainly sap the rider energy & speed, although the 700C wheels will roll a bit easier anyway, I'm unclear which saps most energy though or whether there are other factors involved, but I'm struck how much easier it is to pedal a hub motor bike with its gear friction than a front suspension, fat tyre MTB.
My main thought is that, for ebikes pedalled at 15mph, such a speed/energy efficiency difference would markedly decrease range from the same battery, maybe even 20% or so less, unless the less efficient one is ridden more slowly, so clearly a trade-off between comfort and speed/range.
Front suspension forks are probably much better now than my old MTB ones, but the effect is still there presumably. Forks which lock out will help, but add to the weight, and a hard ride when locked out especially if on the front with a hub motor too.
Has anyone else also noticed similarly high losses from suspension or oversized tyres, compared to other, more efficient, bikes?
Stuart.