Hi, Warning – long post…
Thinking of getting around to installing a kit on my old mountain bike. Tbh, still undecided on the best option. Don’t want to fork out too much money so looking at a kit and not a complete bike.
I am not enjoying driving much these days although I do have access to a car and can drive if needed. As well as not enjoying driving, petrol is expensive and cars are not very green (another reason for reusing my old bike).
I am 11 stone 0 lb and 5’10” although I plan to lose maybe another 7lb and have lost 6lb in the last month or so. I don’t commute into the office much as I usually work from home but if I do go in it’s a 21mile hilly ride each way. Using the Whoosh ‘Predictor’ calculator its about 270Wh each way at 15MPH. I can charge at work.
I have started to use my bike regularly for cycling to caving, relatively short distances but still some 10 degrees + hills and maybe 20kg of kit in panniers. Been doing this unassisted at the moment but a bit of a drag after digging and hauling 100 buckets of mud and rock from a cave…
Ideally, I would like to be able to some supermarket shopping as well. 12 mile round trip with short sections of 15 degree hill – Whoosh Pedictor calculated 177Wh round trip. Again, would expect additional 20KG and possible even a cargo trailer and a bit more weight…thinking I need one of the higher torque motors here….
Finally, I would ideally like to option of riding into Bristol when I go Bouldering – but this may be a stretch too far without an additional battery. This is about 42 miles round trip and about 600Wh on the ‘Predictor’ at 15Mph. In reality not sure I would do this and I think this requirement is quite an issue on a single battery as can’t recharge battery at half way point. I guess it depends how well the lower assist modes work and how much I can help…
I have not really cycled much at all for years and was never really much of a cyclist. I am quite fit although walking / caving fit, not cycling fit. I do have an exercise bike I occasionally use in the winter (and I think it is quite accurate in the info it gives). Had a little experiment last night in the baking heat and exercised for 1 hour at an output of between 250 to 300 watts continuously at a cadence of 90 to 95 RPM. I expect with a bit of practice I could manage 250 watts at 90 RPM for a couple of hours so I am certainly able to contribute to an electric bike’s effort – not wanting an effort free experience – but I do want to even out the hills.
I did an ebike conversion many years ago – it was a Bafang front hub motor but it was early days and not many DIY options about. It was throttle only and that sucked. Also, the rack mounted battery sucked as it was particularly high.
I have to say that I think I would be best off with a CD bike but not willing to pay for a pre-built. I know there are crank drive kits but worry about the reliability of these?
So have been looking mainly are rear hub so far and mainly Whoosh kits. There was no room to a cadence sensor on either side of my crank (not enough room on the left and on the right the front derailleur is mounted to the bottom bracket and the frame so minimal clearance from small chainring to derailleur bracket). I swapped the BB to get more room on the left but as expected is screwed up the chainline too much and the front derailleur could not pull the chain onto the big chainring. Sure, I could have gone to single chainring but I want an option if I have to pedal up hills under my own steam. The awkward derailleur bracked also limited options for replacement cranksets but I found a cheap double chainring. That fits and works and I have enough clearance for a left hand sensor how. It is only 22t and 36t so a bit small but on the 11t cog at 90RPM cadence I am doing ~22.5MPH and at a leisurely 60 RPM I am doing 15MPH so I think this just about works if not quite ideal.
I do have some questions on the Whoosh kits. How do the assist modes really work? Do they have different current limit cut-off or something different? Also, I think the older firmwares have no zero assist mode i.e. just human power with a powered up display showing speed – I think the newer firmwares on King Meter support this but is this what Whoosh ships?
As for the motor, I was tending towards the DWG22C-48V as this has higher torque at lower speeds (may be useful for the supermarket run). However, in downtube battery limited to 12 Ah so 576 Wh. Also, I wonder if this motor is as efficient as 15MPH as the other motors. Alternatively, the XF08 CST but this is 45NM instead of 60NM but has the option of a 17AH 36v battery at 612wh so I suspect a bit more range. I think my old bike had a front Bafang 36v hub motor and was maybe 50NM. I found this easily got me up most hills at full assist speed. I guess a front Bafang is still an option. I do wonder if I wasted my time changing the BB and fitting the double chainring – maybe I should have gone with the CD torque sensing TSDZ2 after all…but I do worry about the reliability of these and the availability of spare parts and ease of fixing. Another option is to switch from cassette to freewheel (my bike has a 7 speed cassette at the moment), and go with a SWX02 36v or more likely 48v variant?
Finally, I suspect I will need to file out the dropouts a bit – what width do I need between the flats for the various motors? I would also need to file the rear derailleur hanger I expect as this is the same width as the drop-outs. Ideally, I would rather not have to do this but I think it will be unavoidable.
I suspect Whoosh can best help me decide and I know they read these forums but also interested in other’s experience. The motor performance graphs on the whoosh site are useful but only for a few bike options. My gut feeling is the DWG22C-48V or change to freewheel and go with the SWX02 48v. Which of these motors is likely to better suit my needs and be most reliable?
Thanks for the help, C.
Thinking of getting around to installing a kit on my old mountain bike. Tbh, still undecided on the best option. Don’t want to fork out too much money so looking at a kit and not a complete bike.
I am not enjoying driving much these days although I do have access to a car and can drive if needed. As well as not enjoying driving, petrol is expensive and cars are not very green (another reason for reusing my old bike).
I am 11 stone 0 lb and 5’10” although I plan to lose maybe another 7lb and have lost 6lb in the last month or so. I don’t commute into the office much as I usually work from home but if I do go in it’s a 21mile hilly ride each way. Using the Whoosh ‘Predictor’ calculator its about 270Wh each way at 15MPH. I can charge at work.
I have started to use my bike regularly for cycling to caving, relatively short distances but still some 10 degrees + hills and maybe 20kg of kit in panniers. Been doing this unassisted at the moment but a bit of a drag after digging and hauling 100 buckets of mud and rock from a cave…
Ideally, I would like to be able to some supermarket shopping as well. 12 mile round trip with short sections of 15 degree hill – Whoosh Pedictor calculated 177Wh round trip. Again, would expect additional 20KG and possible even a cargo trailer and a bit more weight…thinking I need one of the higher torque motors here….
Finally, I would ideally like to option of riding into Bristol when I go Bouldering – but this may be a stretch too far without an additional battery. This is about 42 miles round trip and about 600Wh on the ‘Predictor’ at 15Mph. In reality not sure I would do this and I think this requirement is quite an issue on a single battery as can’t recharge battery at half way point. I guess it depends how well the lower assist modes work and how much I can help…
I have not really cycled much at all for years and was never really much of a cyclist. I am quite fit although walking / caving fit, not cycling fit. I do have an exercise bike I occasionally use in the winter (and I think it is quite accurate in the info it gives). Had a little experiment last night in the baking heat and exercised for 1 hour at an output of between 250 to 300 watts continuously at a cadence of 90 to 95 RPM. I expect with a bit of practice I could manage 250 watts at 90 RPM for a couple of hours so I am certainly able to contribute to an electric bike’s effort – not wanting an effort free experience – but I do want to even out the hills.
I did an ebike conversion many years ago – it was a Bafang front hub motor but it was early days and not many DIY options about. It was throttle only and that sucked. Also, the rack mounted battery sucked as it was particularly high.
I have to say that I think I would be best off with a CD bike but not willing to pay for a pre-built. I know there are crank drive kits but worry about the reliability of these?
So have been looking mainly are rear hub so far and mainly Whoosh kits. There was no room to a cadence sensor on either side of my crank (not enough room on the left and on the right the front derailleur is mounted to the bottom bracket and the frame so minimal clearance from small chainring to derailleur bracket). I swapped the BB to get more room on the left but as expected is screwed up the chainline too much and the front derailleur could not pull the chain onto the big chainring. Sure, I could have gone to single chainring but I want an option if I have to pedal up hills under my own steam. The awkward derailleur bracked also limited options for replacement cranksets but I found a cheap double chainring. That fits and works and I have enough clearance for a left hand sensor how. It is only 22t and 36t so a bit small but on the 11t cog at 90RPM cadence I am doing ~22.5MPH and at a leisurely 60 RPM I am doing 15MPH so I think this just about works if not quite ideal.
I do have some questions on the Whoosh kits. How do the assist modes really work? Do they have different current limit cut-off or something different? Also, I think the older firmwares have no zero assist mode i.e. just human power with a powered up display showing speed – I think the newer firmwares on King Meter support this but is this what Whoosh ships?
As for the motor, I was tending towards the DWG22C-48V as this has higher torque at lower speeds (may be useful for the supermarket run). However, in downtube battery limited to 12 Ah so 576 Wh. Also, I wonder if this motor is as efficient as 15MPH as the other motors. Alternatively, the XF08 CST but this is 45NM instead of 60NM but has the option of a 17AH 36v battery at 612wh so I suspect a bit more range. I think my old bike had a front Bafang 36v hub motor and was maybe 50NM. I found this easily got me up most hills at full assist speed. I guess a front Bafang is still an option. I do wonder if I wasted my time changing the BB and fitting the double chainring – maybe I should have gone with the CD torque sensing TSDZ2 after all…but I do worry about the reliability of these and the availability of spare parts and ease of fixing. Another option is to switch from cassette to freewheel (my bike has a 7 speed cassette at the moment), and go with a SWX02 36v or more likely 48v variant?
Finally, I suspect I will need to file out the dropouts a bit – what width do I need between the flats for the various motors? I would also need to file the rear derailleur hanger I expect as this is the same width as the drop-outs. Ideally, I would rather not have to do this but I think it will be unavoidable.
I suspect Whoosh can best help me decide and I know they read these forums but also interested in other’s experience. The motor performance graphs on the whoosh site are useful but only for a few bike options. My gut feeling is the DWG22C-48V or change to freewheel and go with the SWX02 48v. Which of these motors is likely to better suit my needs and be most reliable?
Thanks for the help, C.