A steep learning curve to dismay.
I love the great outdoors, the sense of freedom, the hope of economical riding, the wind in my hair (still got lots - hair, do you mind? ), even the rain in my face.
I refuse to rollover (fell off a few times).
I do 2 x 44 mile rides each week, each on 3 batteries: I am going to France for 9 days touring (30 mpd) on 4 batteries , 3 chargers with two bikes. Perhaps in the Country that invented the Tour de France they will let me top up lunch time (lunch times tend to be long in France) even if I am 'velectric'.
Peter
The title says it all for me.I'm with Ian and yourself Peter on this question.
Lithium is only fit for purpose for short local trips in a low loading situation. It works in my Q bike because that never needs more than half throttle to do anything, and that bike chiefly does short journeys, just under four and just under six mile trips being the most common two, with charging straight after. Those trips are a small part of the thirty or so mile range.
On the T bike, lithium just couldn't do the job, so it had to be NiMh, simply because it does the job and will last. Despite the nickel price problem, they aren't really expensive when they last more than twice as long, they're still a bargain by comparison.
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I love the great outdoors, the sense of freedom, the hope of economical riding, the wind in my hair (still got lots - hair, do you mind? ), even the rain in my face.
I refuse to rollover (fell off a few times).
I do 2 x 44 mile rides each week, each on 3 batteries: I am going to France for 9 days touring (30 mpd) on 4 batteries , 3 chargers with two bikes. Perhaps in the Country that invented the Tour de France they will let me top up lunch time (lunch times tend to be long in France) even if I am 'velectric'.
Peter