After biking up Winnats Pass the other day on my hub motor with a lowest gear of 24x32, it got me thinking again about swapping to a mid-drive setup, so it can utilize my gears. I was doing about 4 MPH up that hill for most of it and I actually started to feel sorry for my hub motor at one point!
The drawback to a mid-drive for me, was always that I'd have to ditch my triple chainrings and run a single chainring - now that just scares me but at the same time, a mid-drive utilizes the gearing - but does that effectively give you lower gearing, or about the same? I have no idea because I've never tried a mid-drive eBike!
I mean lets say I have a hub motor on and use a 24t inner chainring with a 32t low sprocket on my cassette - that's 19.22 gear inches.
With a 42t chainring and 46t low sprocket on a mid-drive setup, that increases the lowest gear to 23.40 gear inches. A gear increase of 21.75%.
In other words I guess it's like losing about 1.5 gears on the cassette. It's turning a 24x32t (hub) into a 24x26t (mid-drive).
What I am getting at then is, would 24x26t, or rather 42x46t... be considered a low gear on amid-drive setup? Can that get you up a hill with less effort required than if you had 24x32t on a 500W hub motor?
I'm just worried about having to ride the bike if there's no power, for whatever reason that might be. On a hub it's not even anything I think or worry about. On a mid-drive, the gears simply have to be higher due to the need for a single chainring, it's a bit of a deal breaker for me, but at the same time I don't like stressing my hub motor on these 20% gradients I want to climb!
I wish there was some sort of calculator to tell me, I mean where you'd just put in a bunch of gears on a single chainring for hub and mid-drive, put the Watts in for each motor, then it could tell you the Watts required to go at X speed up X gradient, or just show you that one needs whatever percentage more effort compared to the other.
I can't even fit a mid-drive because of my press-fit bottom bracket shell... and I'd have to buy all the 11-speed stuff again to end up with that 46t huge low sprocket, but if it's so much better for hills than my hub, it's worth doing it.
The drawback to a mid-drive for me, was always that I'd have to ditch my triple chainrings and run a single chainring - now that just scares me but at the same time, a mid-drive utilizes the gearing - but does that effectively give you lower gearing, or about the same? I have no idea because I've never tried a mid-drive eBike!
I mean lets say I have a hub motor on and use a 24t inner chainring with a 32t low sprocket on my cassette - that's 19.22 gear inches.
With a 42t chainring and 46t low sprocket on a mid-drive setup, that increases the lowest gear to 23.40 gear inches. A gear increase of 21.75%.
In other words I guess it's like losing about 1.5 gears on the cassette. It's turning a 24x32t (hub) into a 24x26t (mid-drive).
What I am getting at then is, would 24x26t, or rather 42x46t... be considered a low gear on amid-drive setup? Can that get you up a hill with less effort required than if you had 24x32t on a 500W hub motor?
I'm just worried about having to ride the bike if there's no power, for whatever reason that might be. On a hub it's not even anything I think or worry about. On a mid-drive, the gears simply have to be higher due to the need for a single chainring, it's a bit of a deal breaker for me, but at the same time I don't like stressing my hub motor on these 20% gradients I want to climb!
I wish there was some sort of calculator to tell me, I mean where you'd just put in a bunch of gears on a single chainring for hub and mid-drive, put the Watts in for each motor, then it could tell you the Watts required to go at X speed up X gradient, or just show you that one needs whatever percentage more effort compared to the other.
I can't even fit a mid-drive because of my press-fit bottom bracket shell... and I'd have to buy all the 11-speed stuff again to end up with that 46t huge low sprocket, but if it's so much better for hills than my hub, it's worth doing it.