I finally have finished with a conversion of an old (circa 2020 circa 2002) Titanium framed mountain bike.
It has a 250W rear Bafang hub motor, with 7 speed freewheel and 3 speed front gears.
The eBike controller and spare bits of cable are in a small two part bag by the top tube and steering column. This arrangement minimises the cables on show, the motor, battery and PAS cables run along the underneath of the battery holder.
The brakes are currently cabled disk brakes, and they are definitely not good, but serviceable. They were fitted because they were cheap and I did not realise the old Hope Mini hydraulics could be reconditioned. Hope have now done the work on them and they will be fitted at a later date.
It rides well enough, using around 80W of battery power on assist level 1 @ 12mph and around 135W of battery power on assist level 2 @ 14mph. Put the power assist up to 5 and as long as the bike is in a high enough gear you get up to 18mph without a lot of physical effort.
I see quite a lot of comment on here about apparently ‘needing’ more powerful, and not legal, motors so that you can power up hills. If you keep the bike in the gear you would use on the flat to trundle along at 14mph, then you would probably need a fairly powerful motor to keep going at that speed up a hill.
But this 250W motor manages just fine. When you come to a steep hill, you step down the gears to keep the cadence up and up the power assist to level 5. When going up a 1:9 hill I was getting around 550W of power assist with only the normal on the flat effort from me. Speed was not high, 8mph, but I don't see that as a problem.
Overall I am happy with the setup, the suspension and fatter tyres make the bike a lot more comfortable and safer on local urban roads than my Brompton. Keeping 3+7 speed gears definitely helps to make hills a lot more manageable.
Fitted with Schwalbe Marathon Plus on the front and Marathon Plus Tour 1.75 on the rear.
Weight with 36v 11Ahr battery - 18.5kg.
Thanks for the wise words.
It has a 250W rear Bafang hub motor, with 7 speed freewheel and 3 speed front gears.
The eBike controller and spare bits of cable are in a small two part bag by the top tube and steering column. This arrangement minimises the cables on show, the motor, battery and PAS cables run along the underneath of the battery holder.
The brakes are currently cabled disk brakes, and they are definitely not good, but serviceable. They were fitted because they were cheap and I did not realise the old Hope Mini hydraulics could be reconditioned. Hope have now done the work on them and they will be fitted at a later date.
It rides well enough, using around 80W of battery power on assist level 1 @ 12mph and around 135W of battery power on assist level 2 @ 14mph. Put the power assist up to 5 and as long as the bike is in a high enough gear you get up to 18mph without a lot of physical effort.
I see quite a lot of comment on here about apparently ‘needing’ more powerful, and not legal, motors so that you can power up hills. If you keep the bike in the gear you would use on the flat to trundle along at 14mph, then you would probably need a fairly powerful motor to keep going at that speed up a hill.
But this 250W motor manages just fine. When you come to a steep hill, you step down the gears to keep the cadence up and up the power assist to level 5. When going up a 1:9 hill I was getting around 550W of power assist with only the normal on the flat effort from me. Speed was not high, 8mph, but I don't see that as a problem.
Overall I am happy with the setup, the suspension and fatter tyres make the bike a lot more comfortable and safer on local urban roads than my Brompton. Keeping 3+7 speed gears definitely helps to make hills a lot more manageable.
Fitted with Schwalbe Marathon Plus on the front and Marathon Plus Tour 1.75 on the rear.
Weight with 36v 11Ahr battery - 18.5kg.
Thanks for the wise words.
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