I have recently fitted a Woosh XF07 front hub kit with 17Ah battery to a 700c cheapish alloy tandem (cromo forks). Very, very happy so far with the product & the customer service from Woosh.
Could anybody here give advice as to any special precautions to take when using these conversion kits in inclement weather. I am resident in the North of Scotland where it has been known to rain every so often. The tandem is used daily for ferrying kids to school (doesn't need the e- assist for this really) & for longer runs with the wife and a nipper in a rear seat at times (all up weight in this instance about 175 kg where the motor comes in handy). I am a reasonably fit cyclist so don't mind giving a fair proportion of the ooomph to save burning out the motor!
The LCD display unit looks fairly weatherproof, the controller is protected by the battery (when fitted - pretty exposed otherwise), the cable connections appear pretty tight, the throttle looks like it could suffer from some water ingress.
I'm inclined to just 'suck it & see' and just head out into the showers, maybe putting an old bread bag or similar over the display if the rain gets particularly heavy. Attach a couple of images of the tentative conversion (still not fully tidied up), should I be carrying more clingfilm on those rainy days??
Thanks for any advice, cheers, Simon
Could anybody here give advice as to any special precautions to take when using these conversion kits in inclement weather. I am resident in the North of Scotland where it has been known to rain every so often. The tandem is used daily for ferrying kids to school (doesn't need the e- assist for this really) & for longer runs with the wife and a nipper in a rear seat at times (all up weight in this instance about 175 kg where the motor comes in handy). I am a reasonably fit cyclist so don't mind giving a fair proportion of the ooomph to save burning out the motor!
The LCD display unit looks fairly weatherproof, the controller is protected by the battery (when fitted - pretty exposed otherwise), the cable connections appear pretty tight, the throttle looks like it could suffer from some water ingress.
I'm inclined to just 'suck it & see' and just head out into the showers, maybe putting an old bread bag or similar over the display if the rain gets particularly heavy. Attach a couple of images of the tentative conversion (still not fully tidied up), should I be carrying more clingfilm on those rainy days??
Thanks for any advice, cheers, Simon