Hi all,
New here, though I've been reading the forums (fora?) for a few days, and reading about ebikes/pedelecs for a few weeks.
TL;DR : If you skip the background below, what I need is a reliable daily commuter that I can use for 5x20 mile round-trip commute weekly for a sustained period of time. Maintenance should be maneageable and routine.
Budget of about €2000, but less obviously better
I'd like the bike to feel relatively active/responsive, and I've test driven Cube hybrids and Orbea Gains so far.
Qs:
I'll try and lay out my transport need. Apologies the post is long, but I've seen lots of posts here where the first response is to ask for more clarification.
Background/Situation: I'm shortly changing job, and will have a 20 mile round-trip commute across Dublin city. Public transport is awkward, I'd rather get out of the car, and so I'm looking at bicycles again.
Google maps reckons a 1 hr cycle there, (I'll drop 27m of elevation as I head to river (2 miles), then climb 100m on the far side (8 miles)) and 50mins back. That's at the upper end of the time I want to spend cycling, and the long climb to the office would leave me more tired/sweaty than I want to be every day.
Me: I'm 42, 5'9", not fit but at least not overweight. Cycle occasionally on an old (20 yrs!) but decent (triple butted steel Trek) mountain bike with slicks, no suspension. I like to ride quickly and actively (taking lane, keeping up with traffic, etc.,). Used to cycle all the time.
What I've been looking at/testing so far:
New here, though I've been reading the forums (fora?) for a few days, and reading about ebikes/pedelecs for a few weeks.
TL;DR : If you skip the background below, what I need is a reliable daily commuter that I can use for 5x20 mile round-trip commute weekly for a sustained period of time. Maintenance should be maneageable and routine.
Budget of about €2000, but less obviously better
I'd like the bike to feel relatively active/responsive, and I've test driven Cube hybrids and Orbea Gains so far.
Qs:
- Any other bikes/makes I should look at? I've been around main bike shops here, and traditional online bike shops. But there's a plethora of online ebike/pedelec offerings that I find hard to parse.
- Any particular setups that are more/less reiiable/maintainable? Some threads here seemed to indicate central drive was more of a maintenance challenge. Any technologies that are more "hackable"/"open-source type"? Any tools to buy?
- Is buying online sensible enough for something like this?
I'll try and lay out my transport need. Apologies the post is long, but I've seen lots of posts here where the first response is to ask for more clarification.
Background/Situation: I'm shortly changing job, and will have a 20 mile round-trip commute across Dublin city. Public transport is awkward, I'd rather get out of the car, and so I'm looking at bicycles again.
Google maps reckons a 1 hr cycle there, (I'll drop 27m of elevation as I head to river (2 miles), then climb 100m on the far side (8 miles)) and 50mins back. That's at the upper end of the time I want to spend cycling, and the long climb to the office would leave me more tired/sweaty than I want to be every day.
Me: I'm 42, 5'9", not fit but at least not overweight. Cycle occasionally on an old (20 yrs!) but decent (triple butted steel Trek) mountain bike with slicks, no suspension. I like to ride quickly and actively (taking lane, keeping up with traffic, etc.,). Used to cycle all the time.
What I've been looking at/testing so far:
- Cube:
- Was first looking at some 2018 bikes online from Germany. Cube Cross Hybrid Pro @ €1839 or Cube Cross Hybrid Pro All Road (lights, mudguards) @ €1919 both in 54cm. These have the Bosch CX drive, 10 speed Deore.
- Then found a Cube Touring Hybrid One 2018 in a Dublin LBS, for €1749. This has the Bosch Active Line Plus (50Nm) drive, and lower spec drive train (Altus I think). On plus side: carrier, mudguards, lights. Also easy for me to use Irish cycle-to-work which would knock €500 off the above price.
- Was first looking at some 2018 bikes online from Germany. Cube Cross Hybrid Pro @ €1839 or Cube Cross Hybrid Pro All Road (lights, mudguards) @ €1919 both in 54cm. These have the Bosch CX drive, 10 speed Deore.
- Orbea:
- First bike I liked the look of (online) was the Orbea Gain. They're few and far between in the shops, but I managed to test-ride 2 of them, a D30 (drop handle-bars, tiagra, 2x10 gears) available for €2450, and I think an F40 (straight-bar). Another good shop will have a demo D31 in in November.
- Also tested a Keram, was very similar to the Touring Hybrid One in setup, except €100 more expensive and a little bit lower spec.
- I didn't like the riding position on the Touring Hybrid One when I rode it: felt too "sit up and beg"/Dutch bike for me. The geometry on the Cross Hybrid (Pro) is basically the same, though I haven't tested. That said, there's more room for adjustment in modern headset & stem than I'd realised, so maybe could adjust that.
The assist element felt nice, although I was continually trying to go faster than the assist-limit. The suspension fork seems like a waste of complexity/weight to me, but maybe makes sense for heavy bikes like these. - I very much liked the dropped-handlebar posture of the D30. Found steering and brakes fine/good. Found gear-shifting much harder to get my head around with the brake-lever shifters, and for a commuter I'd almost like to forego a front-dérailleur if I could (like the D31, though that's more expensive again). Same frame on the F40, and I was less keen on riding position, though I think a little better than the Cube tourer.
Assist also felt quite nice, and I appreciated the overall lightness of the bike (14kg or so), feels nicely agile.