Alien 36v kit fitted
Just to back up what Jerry says - I've just finished fitting an Alien 36V kit to my normal commuting bike and things seem to fine and dandy. I had a bit of a problem fitting a throttle to my (outsize) bars but with some help and suggestions from the good folk on the forum (esp Nick/Tiberius) I managed to come up with a solution - this is where, as Jerry says, you may have to adapt things a little.
I'll post a couple of photos of the conversion over the next day or two - not because it's a brilliant conversion (it's not) but more to encourage others who are hovering and thinking of converting.
A couple of things occurred to me as I was testing the "new" bike that you (and the forum) might wish to make a comment on.
I fitted the kit on to a bike I've commuted with over several years - I obviously knew the bike inside out, its weight, what it would and wouldn't do. Once the kit is fitted, the bike is changed a great deal = obviously it is now heavier and things like braking distances change (you're now braking with an extra weight on board) so, without sounding like your dad, make sure you test it on a quiet/off road area. I found my braking with the new kit was really poor - a combination of worn blocks and poor set up probably - however, it had worked fine when the bike was light and was only found out when the kit was installed.
General handling and mode of cycling will obviously change - taking off at lights with a heavier bike for example. However, having said all this, the buzz of being able to attack hefty hills by just pressing the thumb throttle and laugh in the face of headwinds is worth it all.
With all this being said, I can understand why some guys will buy a reasonably priced or second hand hybrid/mountain bike and fit a kit to it. Doing it this way it's as if you have no "previous" with the bike, you start from scratch and you build your ebike with your normal bike in reserve - if I were to do it again, I might save up a few quid and have gone down this route myself . . . nevermind . . .
Oh one other thing - if your looking for a noiseless unit, this isn't it. Certainly the noise would be lost easily in traffic, but if you're on a quieter road, people will hear the "annoyed insect" whine as you fly past.
Rab