You can should be able to get it up to 100 mph if you ride it off Beachy Head. That's where I go when I want to be able to boast about the maximum speed of my bike.raliegh modus
it cuts out at 15 mph seems like it should keep going was wondering if i can modify it in anyway many thanks with my first e bike do not have a car licence anymore so stuck on my two wheels
Thats probably by design; to make the bike legal to use on the roads in the UK.it cuts out at 15 mph
You can should be able to get it up to 100 mph if you ride it off Beachy Head. That's where I go when I want to be able to boast about the maximum speed of my bike.
One other thing: Make sure the tide is in, otherwise you can get a lot of pain when you hit the rocks.
Any legal pedelec stops assist at or below 15.5 mph. A legal pedalec basically counts as a regular bike for different regulations.
You can legally avoid that restriction if you go for an s-pedelec, but that involves license, insurance, etc, and is not legal off-road in publicly accessible places (cycle paths, bridleways etc). Effectively same as a moped for regulations.
You can illegally get around it with a dongle; though Bosch (as on the Motus) et al are getting better at making sure their motors can be illegally tampered with. Chances of being caught are very small unless you ride really badly or get involved in an accident.
nice.......... so next question? is do you know when i can find a link to a dongle
Unfortunately, we can't go back in time. We have to work with the decisions we made. It's £300 or 15mph.tbh iv have done much worse lol
Sorry, I should have said I don't know; but I knew someone who did would be along soon.nice.......... so next question? is do you know when i can find a link to a dongle
Did you check the drag at the cranks. Mine has quite a lot.Just pedal harder for more speed or buy a better drive type, my little G370 front hub easily gets to 22mph once I'm over the 15mph spd cut off. My tsdz2 also is easy to pedal to 20mph +.
Did you check the drag at the cranks. Mine has quite a lot.
Unfortunately, we can't go back in time. We have to work with the decisions we made. It's £300 or 15mph.
If you're good at electronics, there is a hack that would probably work for a few quid. It involves using a double flipflop to halve the speeds sensor pulse frequency, or you can use a small microprocessor to process the speedsignal any way you want. The Bosch system has to use an external sensor on the wheel to get the speed, which leaves it vulnerable to hacking and spoofing until they use GPS to get the speed, which will come soon.
That was for Neal. You slip the chain off the chainwheel and turn the cranks by hand. A normal bike has virtually zero resistance. My TSDZ02B has quite a lot. The Bosch CX had a fair amount until they changed it, especially when pedalling fast. You don't notice it during normal riding because the assistance hides it, but if you try to ride fast without assistance, it saps your energy. This is one of the disadvantages of some crank motors.no idea how to
i saws a video of some moving the magnet from the back wheel to the crank arm would that help to ?Sorry, I should have said I don't know; but I knew someone who did would be along soon.
I expected it would be our main dongle proponent (soundwave), but he is/was in hospital after a fall.
The dongle does also mean that some the stats (speed, distance) on the Motus display are incorrect. I believe some dongles are correct up to a certain speed, then register half. It would probably be simpler if they always registered 1/2; maybe some do. You may well not care anyway.