New to this thinking of commuting

0omo0

Finding my (electric) wheels
Dec 10, 2016
20
11
39
Sanderstead Surrey
Hi all. I've have never tried an ebike though am very tempted to get one to do my daily commute. I priced everything up and realized that I could save myself £156 a month. (v train) Which would be great. The only problems are:-

1. my commute is from sanderstead CR2 to Chelsea SW10 0XD which is 15 miles each way. Up 2 steep hills either direction would a bike battery last for the return journey with hills?

2. I'm a very very out of shape i have not exercised at all since I did the London to Brighton 5 years ago and I've gained a bit/lot of weight. Realistically can you ride these with very little effort? I would struggle otherwise. Though I would like to use this to improve my fitness.

3. I'm wondering how safe it is cycling in central London.

4. My budget is a maximum £2000 and ive been looking around the favourite ive seen so far is the juicy roller (i like a more comfortable upright ride and long advertised range)

If anyone has any recommendations thoughts or opinions I would be very grateful to hear them.

Also any recommendations on where to go to try a good ebike? Are they all very much the same to use? I phoned the local shop on juicy's site though sadly they don't stock the one in interested in to try. Though I'm open to look at other bikes/models.
 
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LeighPing

Esteemed Pedelecer
Mar 27, 2016
2,547
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The Red Ditch
Hi, you'll get plenty of specific bike advice from others later, no doubt. :)

Just my own thoughts and responses to your questions here;-

1. It'll take around an hour, to do that journey, on a 15 mph legal ebike / pedelec. Many bikes will do that mileage on a single charge.

2. Yes.

3. Lights, helmet, a camera and illuminous clothing will help to keep you safe.

4. That amount will give you plenty of choice.

Welcome aboard. :)
 
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0omo0

Finding my (electric) wheels
Dec 10, 2016
20
11
39
Sanderstead Surrey
Thankyou for such a fast response :)

I'm glad you said yes to point 2. And as far as point 3 goes I've already factored in lights and insurance. Although I'm not sure what clothing would be good for all weather cycling. Just got to get a bike and get started.
 

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Danidl

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 29, 2016
8,611
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Ireland
Hi all. I've have never tried an ebike though am very tempted to get one to do my daily commute. I priced everything up and realized that I could save myself £156 a month. (v train) Which would be great. The only problems are:-

1. my commute is from sanderstead CR2 to Chelsea SW10 0XD which is 15 miles each way. Up 2 steep hills either direction would a bike battery last for the return journey with hills?

2. I'm a very very out of shape i have not exercised at all since I did the London to Brighton 5 years ago and I've gained a bit/lot of weight. Realistically can you ride these with very little effort? I would struggle otherwise. Though I would like to use this to improve my fitness.

3. I'm wondering how safe it is cycling in central London.

4. My budget is a maximum £2000 and ive been looking around the favourite ive seen so far is the juicy roller (i like a more comfortable upright ride and long advertised range)

If anyone has any recommendations thoughts or opinions I would be very grateful to hear them.

Also any recommendations on where to go to try a good ebike? Are they all very much the same to use? I phoned the local shop on juicy's site though sadly they don't stock the one in interested in to try. Though I'm open to look at other bikes/models.
Hi all. I've have never tried an ebike though am very tempted to get one to do my daily commute. I priced everything up and realized that I could save myself £156 a month. (v train) Which would be great. The only problems are:-

1. my commute is from sanderstead CR2 to Chelsea SW10 0XD which is 15 miles each way. Up 2 steep hills either direction would a bike battery last for the return journey with hills?

2. I'm a very very out of shape i have not exercised at all since I did the London to Brighton 5 years ago and I've gained a bit/lot of weight. Realistically can you ride these with very little effort? I would struggle otherwise. Though I would like to use this to improve my fitness.

3. I'm wondering how safe it is cycling in central London.

4. My budget is a maximum £2000 and ive been looking around the favourite ive seen so far is the juicy roller (i like a more comfortable upright ride and long advertised range)

If anyone has any recommendations thoughts or opinions I would be very grateful to hear them.

Also any recommendations on where to go to try a good ebike? Are they all very much the same to use? I phoned the local shop on juicy's site though sadly they don't stock the one in interested in to try. Though I'm open to look at other bikes/models.[/QUOTE
 

RobF

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 22, 2012
4,732
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An hour plus in the saddle each way plus a day's work in the middle is quite onerous, but if you are genuinely OK with that your plan could work.

Bear in mind a commute is hard on the bike as well as the rider.

With £2K to spend I would go for a Bosch or Yamaha powered crank drive ebike which should have a reasonable chance of standing up to the commute.

Bosch would be my choice because you can get one with a 500wh battery which should be big enough to do the round trip, even if you need to resort to a higher assist level on the way home.

Cubes look good value at the moment.

There are lots of models, but it might be worth pushing the budget for this one which has the 500wh battery, mudguards and decent lights - although you might want to add a couple of battery LED ones.

No carrier, but another £20 or so would sort that.

https://www.cube.eu/uk/2017/e-bike-trekking/cross-hybrid/cube-cross-hybrid-sl-allroad-500-blacknflashred-2017/
 
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Danidl

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 29, 2016
8,611
12,256
73
Ireland
Hi all. I've have never tried an ebike though am very tempted to get one to do my daily commute. I priced everything up and realized that I could save myself £156 a month. (v train) Which would be great. The only problems are:-

1. my commute is from sanderstead CR2 to Chelsea SW10 0XD which is 15 miles each way. Up 2 steep hills either direction would a bike battery last for the return journey with hills?

2. I'm a very very out of shape i have not exercised at all since I did the London to Brighton 5 years ago and I've gained a bit/lot of weight. Realistically can you ride these with very little effort? I would struggle otherwise. Though I would like to use this to improve my fitness.

3. I'm wondering how safe it is cycling in central London.

4. My budget is a maximum £2000 and ive been looking around the favourite ive seen so far is the juicy roller (i like a more comfortable upright ride and long advertised range)

If anyone has any recommendations thoughts or opinions I would be very grateful to hear them.

Also any recommendations on where to go to try a good ebike? Are they all very much the same to use? I phoned the local shop on juicy's site though sadly they don't stock the one in interested in to try. Though I'm open to look at other bikes/models.

Hi I would agree with almost everything LeighPing has said but
1. while you can get up to a speed of 15 miles per hour and keep it up for an hour or more without tiring yourself out or sweating, I doubt that you can do this through traffic . So you would probably need more like 1.5 hrs with the stops and starts of traffic.
You will know what the traffic is like on your commute very soon.
2. You will get stronger, fitter and probably loose weight. You will actually be energised by the commute and you will save on gym fees.
3. I would advise a central motor drive e.g say a Bosch drive, as they have a reputation for reliability.
4. Look at the Raleigh Motus as a potential short list candidate... it would be within your budget. . I like mine. but There are plenty of equally good equivalents
5. If you have the opportunity of recharging the battery at your place of work, an additional charger should be considered, this would ensure that the battery only partially discharges and this will increase longitivity. Having said that a 400 wh will cover the commute even on turbo assis depending on the number if braking events. . Stop and starts are very wasteful on battery power , probably even more so than hill climbs... What you loose going up a hill you get back on the reverse, you don't get that when you break
6. You would need to make provision for maintenance. tyres at 6 month intervals
7. Get the largest capacity battery , they will lose capacity with time and the bigger they are the longer it will last.
 
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JuicyBike

Trade Member
Jan 26, 2009
1,671
527
Derbyshire
favourite ive seen so far is the juicy roller (i like a more comfortable upright ride and long advertised range)
Well I wont deny you have great taste sir! But I will say that it's imperative you try any bike you're thinking of buying - all bodies and bikes create unique combinations and whilst we've focused on comfort for Roller (and power, weight and range) a test ride is still the only way to avoid wasting your money.

If you let me know the bike shop you'd like to try from I'll do my best to get a Roller to them when they next come back into stock during the second week of 2017.
The only locations to try right now are in Southampton and South Manchester - both far from you I guess.
 
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Gaz

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 14, 2016
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556
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Eastbourne
As a relative newcomer myself to e-bikes I can only reiterate the advice of others in terms of try before you buy. They're all so different it's imperative to work out which one's best for you. I struck lucky on the off chance and ended up with an e-bike that's more comfortable than the commuter I'd been riding for the last 12 years.
I'm an unfit 50+ year old and I find myself looking for excuses to ride instead of drive now. If you're anything like me, you won't regret getting one at all.

Gaz
 

Nealh

Esteemed Pedelecer
Aug 7, 2014
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West Sx RH
Almost any decent bike will do that commute whether hub or crank drive, equally a converted bike will also do the same job. A hub cadence/pas system will allow a leisurely ride if you are a bit weary and tired, ideally any battery from 11ah/400wh to 15ah/540w/h will do that return trip and
should be good for 30 - 50 mile range dependant on terrain and seasonal weather, in winter cold weather expect about 10% less range.
 
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JuicyBike

Trade Member
Jan 26, 2009
1,671
527
Derbyshire
I've been trying to get on the Juicy website, but get this message when I try, is that my issue or yours?
I think that must be a problem with your browser Stuart... Try deleting your cache or use a different browser. All good and secure at the site.
 
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Wicky

Esteemed Pedelecer
Feb 12, 2014
2,823
4,011
Colchester, Essex
www.jhepburn.co.uk
I've been trying to get on the Juicy website, but get this message when I try, is that my issue or yours?
Juicy site works fine at my end

On a pedelec note - I was going to suggest KTM eCross as the panasonic hub drives in 2016 had 500Wh batteries as standard enhancing capability & range.

http://www.pedelecs.co.uk/electric-bike-reviews/ktm-ecross-p-review/

However it looks like they've discontinued the panasonic drives :-(

Reiterating everyone's advice and test ride as many as possible.

edit http://www.flidistribution.co.uk/ktm-bikes/ebikes/panasonic-drive---city-hybrid-bikes/2016-ktm-estreetp

2016 KTM eStreet P > £1,799.99 reduced from £2,099.99

Bargain!

 

Artstu

Esteemed Pedelecer
Aug 2, 2009
2,420
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I think that must be a problem with your browser Stewart... Try deleting your cache or use a different browser. All good and secure at the site.
Tried that, still the same. It is the only site I visit that I can't access.

[The client and server don't support a common SSL protocol version or cipher suite. This is likely to be caused when the server needs RC4, which is no longer considered secure./QUOTE]
 
D

Deleted member 4366

Guest
The biggest single consideration is where you will keep the bike while you're at work. If you're going to keep it in a public place, I guarantee that it won't last more than a couple of weeks. A nice £2000 bike would go a bit sooner than a stealthily converted cheap bike.
 

0omo0

Finding my (electric) wheels
Dec 10, 2016
20
11
39
Sanderstead Surrey
There is a underground carpark with a bike area at the office block i work in. One guy had a problem in the past though i was thinking a chain. Dlock and some cables should be enough to secure everything...? Or would i need more?

The biggest single consideration is where you will keep the bike while you're at work. If you're going to keep it in a public place, I guarantee that it won't last more than a couple of weeks. A nice £2000 bike would go a bit sooner than a stealthily converted cheap bike.
 
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D

Deleted member 4366

Guest
There is a underground carpark with a bike area at the office block i work in. One guy had a problem in the past though i was thinking a chain. Dlock and some cables should be enough to secure everything...? Or would i need more?
That's a difficult one. Cables are a waste of time. They're easily cut with pocket tools. They're OK for occasional parking, but when you park in the same place all day every day and someone likes the look of your wheels, they can bring whatever they need. I heard of one guy that had his nice hydraulic brakes nicked - three screws each can be gone in about one minute.

Another consideration for commuting is the time. 15 miles will take over an hour at the legal 15 mph. An unrestricted bike with a speed of 20 mph would make the journey a lot quicker. Some OEM bikes can be derestricted by secret (known) settings or other methods. Some can't. A person that I know very wel used to commute 15 miles each way. At first he kept his bike restricted, but soon realised that nobody has ever been prosecuted, as far as we know, and nobody is checking, so he adjusted his setting and felt very guilty for the first few days, but as the months went by, that feeling disappeared and journey time went down to 45 minutes.

If you're handy with the spanners, you can convert any cheap bike to an awesome commuter. Here's one i did with a £5 donor bike. Total cost about £500. The battery bag could easily have been made removable, by putting the battery in a bag with a couple of handles, like a strong plastic carrier bag, inside the black zip bag. One connector and you could take it with you. That bike did 1000 miles during one month (January) with absolutely no maintenance, cleaning or adjustments:
 
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Charliefox

Esteemed Pedelecer
Feb 11, 2015
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Culloden Moor Inverness
The biggest single consideration is where you will keep the bike while you're at work. If you're going to keep it in a public place, I guarantee that it won't last more than a couple of weeks. A nice £2000 bike would go a bit sooner than a stealthily converted cheap bike.
I had a look at all the bikes you converted. Blimey! So many. How did the Mrin with the 500W FRONT hub go. I am always being told not to fit a front hub onto alloy suspension forks even with anto rotation measures!