lol!You do know smoking and stopping up all night are bad for you.
Visited this place today and what a nice bunch of people they areThere's an electric bike shop in Dartford (a bit of a distance for you) who have a range of brands available to try - might be well worth a visit.
yes. The battery on the Krieger is 36V 15AH, 540WH. Under ideal conditions and riding at uder the legal 15mph on pedal assist, you would put in roughly 4WH per mile through pedalling and the motor 8WH per mile. On throttle alone, under ideal conditions, you would get about 45 miles. The range will be less with headwinds and hills. The throttle is on the left grip, half width, half twist. We do not support off-roading and cannot guarantee the bike if you derestrict it.
But Kalkhoffs don’t have throttles. Which makes the comparison a bit odd. Unless you get hold of an old stock bike none will have full speed throttles is a few weeks. Not even sure about the old stock bike having one either.Woosh - thanks and yes I've seen your bikes and the krieger looks good. My only concern is whether the battery would do my 25 mile combined hilly commute mainly on the throttle?
Is the throttle a half twist system?
Also, for off road use, is there a way to derestrict your bikes and in doing so would there be any implications for the warranty?
Kudos - thanks - will definitely come and take a look
But Kalkhoffs don’t have throttles. Which makes the comparison a bit odd. Unless you get hold of an old stock bike none will have full speed throttles is a few weeks. Not even sure about the old stock bike having one either.
Your are over thinking this.Thanks John, yes I'd noticed that with a newer one I'd have to be peddling. From the little that I've learnt it would appear that I could adjust settings with the impulse system to accommodate my wishes to do as little as possible. I've also read that the motor is more like 1000w and with the 17amp/hour battery it'd be the longest laster..
Ideally my requirements would be the kalkhoff battery and motor, the woosh price and the ease of altering of a wing.. And of course the reliability of a standard Japanese car.
If that makes any sense?
What would you like to know? the most fragile component on an e-bike is the battery, followed by rolling components (pedals, cranks, bottom bracket, derailleur) and spokes. I am pleased to say that our customers are very satisfied with the level of service that we provide.Great response - thank you.
Do you have any results you could share of development/testing other than the customers you mention?
All bikes have some problems, and Bosch has had motor and battery problems over the past year or so too. There is a thread about faults with a Haibike just up from here. Electrical and frame problems.Your are over thinking this.
Your experience with the road bikes will be mirrored by ebikes.
The more expensive one is likely to be more reliable.
But it's still a crystal ball job.
As a commuter, reliability is most important.
Kalkhoffs do seem a bit more hit and miss than they used to be.
If I were you, I would buy a quality Bosch powered bike and just get on and use it.
Lots of makes to choose from, KTM are keenly priced, as are Cube.
or per 10,000 miles. This is the kind of mileage where writing off the old bike is not painful....
But that isn’t a very good way of judging the number of faults say, per hundred users out in the real world.
Your are over thinking this.
Your experience with the road bikes will be mirrored by ebikes.
The more expensive one is likely to be more reliable.
But it's still a crystal ball job.
As a commuter, reliability is most important.
Kalkhoffs do seem a bit more hit and miss than they used to be.
If I were you, I would buy a quality Bosch powered bike and just get on and use it.
Lots of makes to choose from, KTM are keenly priced, as are Cube.