An epilogue.
First, a recap.
I wanted an off-road bike, a pedelec with a throttle - basically like my Wisper, but with loads more torque. I wasn’t interested in speed, just hill-climbing - north-west London isn’t the Highlands, but some of the off-road tracks have some really climbs, and getting too steep for me lately.
The Boss conversion offered by TETS seemed to fit the bill. Expensive, sure, but my philosophy has always been that if you want the best, you have to pay the price.
On their website, there is a video showing a Boss bike in action - very impressive. It turned out that the Boss is throttle only, but after discussing it with their London branch they assured me that a pedelec version was just a matter of some extra work (and an extra £600 on the bill).
I delivered my bike to them, paid the money and waited, and waited, for many months, during which time they had problems and then more problems. At one stage they delivered the bike to me, but the pedal power only kicked in occasionally, so back it went for further work.
Towards the end of this eight-month period, TETS offered me a different bike - custom-built, looked the part, but I would have ended up paying the £2600 plus the £950 I'd paid for my original non-electric bike, and for £3500+ I could have bought two brand-new Wispers - and worst of all, the offered bike was the same nominal torque rating as my Wisper 905.
I turned down the offer, and settled for a refund instead, as eight months was long enough even for someone with my patience. It took a few weeks to negotiate the final terms of surrender. Initially, LETS wanted to knock off £430 for the 'rack and bag' , the brake levers, and fitting those bits. Eventually they backed down and just gave me back all my money, including the new Topeak rack and bag (to replace my original rack which they'd lost), and left the new brake levers on the bike.
So financially I couldn't complain - in fact if you read the preceding pages, I haven’t complained about price, just what I got for my money. The other cause for complaint was the lack of expertise shown by TETS - first telling me that they could certainly build the bike I wanted, and finally telling me not only that they couldn’t, and that in their opinion no-one else could, either!
Anyway, as you can't ride a refund, I was stuck with no bike.
At which point St George, in the person of d8veh (well-known in these columns) rode to my rescue and offered to build me the bike I'd wanted for the cost of the parts, which he guessed would be around £1000. We had an upside-down haggling session in which I finally got him to agree to accept more money than that - although if he'd included his labour, the final bill would have been FAR higher.
And after a couple of months, he delivered.
And what a bike!
A powerful (500W) off-roader with full throttle and pedelec functions - see photographs below
View attachment 10071 .
My 'donor' bike had been a nicely balanced mountain bike - an On One steel frame, and pre-electric it rode like a thoroughbred. Dave decided to 're-balance' the new e-bike by distributing the extra weight towards the centre, and built a one-off battery container to fit into my 'triangle’. He made a wooden mould, and then cast a fibre-glass container. He found a specialist battery maker in Germany to make a triangular battery to fit the new space, so that the extra weight of the motor and battery are spread out from back wheel to handlebars, and the bike is as well balanced as ever.
He used the following configuration (not that I understand the technicalities, being a rider rather than a fixer): a 48v Bafang BPM2 motor (500w 260 rpm at 25 amps). The custom-built battery is 48v, 15aH, Sony VT3 cells. Bafang 500W BMSB kit (motor, controller, LCD, torque arms, throttle, etc). to achieve what I'd asked for in the first place, that is to say a pedelec, set up like my Wisper 905, but much (much) more powerful.
I'm now riding round on what TETS declared was an impossibility.
The controller is tucked-in on top of the battery, under the crossbar. Handlebar controls are the throttle, an on-off switch which controls the power level, and an easy-to-read LCD which shows power levels (1 to 5), battery charge indicator, inside and outside temperature (probably) - all the usual data you get from a bike computer.
Haven’t tested the range yet, but Dave took the bike out on a long test ride (50km), and reported that the battery still had loads left when he returned. More than enough for me, as a long run for me would be 15km.
The ride is smooth and powerful - it’s been a long time since I’ve driven a sports car, but that’s certainly the feeling (compared to the Wisper, which is more like a Transit van).
It does go fast, of course, but it is the raw power that pleases me most - I can take my large and unfit body (125kg-plus, one plastic leg, generally old and not what it was) to the foot of a very steep path, and get to the top - with some effort on my part - where before I would have had to stop half way, and either turn and go back, or push my heavy and underpowered Wisper to the summit.
On level ground, particularly in a park where I might encounter pedestrians, I keep the power setting to ‘3’, which is about equivalent to maximum on the Wisper, and it moves me along (with some pedalling) at 12 to 15 mph or so. I don’t think it would go particularly fast - maybe 25 or so tops - but speed doesn’t interest me.
I’ve kept to Schwalbe Marathon Plus tyres, which gave me over 4 years puncture-free riding on the Wisper, and I’ve slimed the tubes. Fingers crossed.
The brakes are excellent. We’ve used hydraulic discs - beautifully smooth action - in fact it feels like braking in a car, even in the wet.
Unfortunately for the e-bike industry, Dave doesn’t want a job. He’s far too busy doing favours for the likes of me, which is the e-bike industry’s loss, and our gain. The expertise and inventiveness of this man is stunning, and there are too few like him.
============