Bike bought 20th March
Update 15/11/17
Haibike sDuro HardSeven SL 2015 Yamaha
My mileage has crept up to 7470 with 1470 miles on the new motor.
My Specialised Crossroads Armadillo 650B 27.6” Wired Clincher tyres in 1.9” are now up to 1940 miles with no punctures and little wear showing providing a great road biased off road tyre. They offer a great puncture resistant tough tyre alternative to the ubiquitous offerings from Schwalbe. I started with the Schwalbe smart sam plus puncture resistant tyres and would have probably stayed with them if I had not had a nasty rear wheel side wall failure blow out puncture. A bit like a restaurant where you get one bad meal this precipitated the change to Specialised. If I had started with marathon plus I might never have changed as from seeing the reviews by other members they are very tough and not prone to the failure I experienced with the smart sam plus tyres.
My battery still continues to show little sign of degradation after 2 years and 7 months and 7470 miles.
The Sigma Buster 200 front light that I replaced the moon meteor with works well however the battery indicator is turning red after as little as 5 miles of my 10 mile road commute which is disappointing after 7 months ownership. In fairness the light keeps shining brightly with no diminution to journeys end so the battery indicator might be on the conservative side.
The top gear on my 12-36 shimanao alvio cassette combined with 42tooth chainring started to jump on my return from work on Monday.
This cassette has lasted longer than others covering 2220 miles. However I think the longevity of this cassette has been achieved by not using more than eco power in top gear. I ride the bike to work to get a work out and the combination of eco and my effort in top gear allows me to maintain 20/21 miles an hour plus on level tarmac. I have also mostly used eco in the 14tooth gear 8 but will use the next power level up for short bursts to crest a couple of steeper gradients. On steeper gradients I use standard power and any appropriate gear from 7 down.
Recently the chain has started coming off the front chainring in quite specific circumstances when I have stopped pedaling travelling at speed down a steeper hill. It means stopping at the bottom and putting it back on again. It never happens when under load pedaling. It could easily be related to the whole drive train having covered over 2000 miles.
However this has led to some more pondering on my part on how to prevent this. During on line research I came across narrow wide front chain rings that are designed to keep the chain on in all circumstances and seem to be well reviewed. Great I thought but they are generally not made in sizes above 38teeth in the 4 bolt 104 BCD format I require to fit my bike.
Anyway this led to more online research and I have found a company that can supply me with one and I have ordered it to see what difference it makes.
This then led me to see whether there were any widely available 9 speed cassettes with a wider ratios than the current 12/36 I use with my 42 tooth chainring. I found a sunrace 9 speed cassette with a 11/40 spread.
This might lead to a further experimentation in gearing allowing me to use an even bigger 44 or 46 tooth front chainring and still have a low enough bottom gear (4 extra teeth) for my off road routes steepest hills.
The thinking behind this is that the 15 tooth gear 7 of the sunrace cassette would become my effective top speed commuting road gear and the benefit would be having 15 teeth this gear would be much more resistant to the wear that constant high speed commuting on a crank powered bike inflicts, allowing me to maintain higher road speeds, up to 25 miles an hour, but still have a low enough bottom gear for my xc routes steepest hills. Gears 8 and 9 would become overdrive gears but might still be fun for the occasional blast using the highest power assist level.
The trouble with experimenting with gearing is that it can be quite expensive as the only way to really find out how suitable the change in gearing is for your circumstances is to buy a larger chainring you think will work and ride it to see how well it works but potentially have to buy another one if it is not quite right.
That is how I arrived at my current 12/36 cassette 42 tooth chainring combination.
Not to mention that a longer cage rear mech might at some point in the experiment be required. Fun though!
The above picture shows the great benefit of getting out of your car on your journey to work.