Compared to how much you've spent on bikes, scooters, cycling specific clothes, lighting, parts and tools, is it expensive?No I'm not going to take the tube/bus instead, it's slow, crowded and expensive...
My junk Bike was £40 including a lock.
Compared to how much you've spent on bikes, scooters, cycling specific clothes, lighting, parts and tools, is it expensive?No I'm not going to take the tube/bus instead, it's slow, crowded and expensive...
Yes I'm probably the same one you saw 3 years ago... When I didn't have an ebike yetCWAH...are you the same Cwah that I remember test riding our Kudos bikes on the Mall,London,some 3 years ago?
KudosDave
Yes, london tube is incredibly expensive. Last year I was living in Zone 4. Which cost about 160GBP/month travel fare with the oyster card. Now I'm in central london Zone 2, and it's still at 120GBP/month.Compared to how much you've spent on bikes, scooters, cycling specific clothes, lighting, parts and tools, is it expensive?
My junk Bike was £40 including a lock.
The folding tandem was not a serious suggestion, it was designed to be easily transportable inside a medium size car, hatchback or estate car.John,that tandem is a great idea...I can see CWAH getting that into his flat and storing it,hehe.... Off subject I saw a manufacturer in Tianjin who had a very sexy looking e-tandem, with a BPM motor it would potentially be a wonderful machine. Would love to bring a batch over,but is there a market for such a tandem? MOQ would probably be 30 units,storing it,for me,would be a problem
KudosDave
www.kudoscycles.com
The folding e-tandem is quite unique.......until someone tells me otherwise.I've always been thinking of getting a cargo or tandem bike. But in london it would be really difficult to park/store. If the tandam is small enough to fit in a lift I'd be glad to hear more about it
That's not expensive compared to the limited competition in e-tandems, I think it's a good price. I recognise the front, it's basically the Quando frame and hinge but with new forks and handlebar stem, the rear grafted on by using a much longer rear main spar.The folding e-tandem is quite unique.......until someone tells me otherwise.
eZee built one only for fun, it is however available for £2,000
Well spotted Tony,That's not expensive compared to the limited competition in e-tandems, I think it's a good price. I recognise the front, it's basically the Quando frame and hinge but with new forks and handlebar stem, the rear grafted on by using a much longer rear main spar.
There have been some socket-joined-frame tandems that break down into two pieces, but I don't remember a hinged one offhand.
And dramatically reduce your bank balace, I suspectAbout 5 years ago, I bought an EVT4000 scooter secondhand....
The range was poor too, only about 20 miles. If I still had it, maybe converting it to a big lithium pack would increase the range and dramatically reduce the weight.View attachment 8119 View attachment 8120
Not really, the lead batteries would be good for less than half their capacity in that usage so 48v 20 amp would probably exceed the rang of the original battery due to weight loss and fully usable capacity and it would cost around 110 gbp if you are into r/c LiPo. Even a 40 ah pack would be cheaper than the original batteries.And dramatically reduce your bank balace, I suspect
True, I imagine something like 50ah of Lithium at 48v would cost about £600, but it would have made the scooter a really practical proposition. Itr handled and performed just like the 50cc petrol equivalents, and I got it secondhand via Ebay for about £700.And dramatically reduce your bank balace, I suspect
It seems that someone had the same idea:About 5 years ago, I bought an EVT4000 scooter secondhand.
It was a road legal, UK type approved, 30 mph electric scooter.
That complied with the same legislation as a 50cc moped, but with free road tax. That saved £16, but it it still needed an annual MOT test at £30, and insurance at £95.
It worked really well, giving 30mph in almost complete silence, good handling and stopping with hydraulic disc brakes, and could legally carry a pillion passenger.
The man thing that let it down was the battery technology at the time. The 48volts was achieved with four 12v 50 a/h sealed lead acid batteries that cost nearly £500 for the set. Worse than that was the weight penalty. Those batteries took the unladen weight up to more than my 125cc motorbike. It was impossible to lift the bike at all.
The range was poor too, only about 20 miles. If I still had it, maybe converting it to a big lithium pack would increase the range and dramatically reduce the weight.
Thanks for that Wilbur, a very interesting link. I hadn't thought of Googling the possibility of someone having tried fitting lithium into one.It seems that someone had the same idea:
http://visforvoltage.org/forum/9063-evt4000-testing-lifepo4-lithium-ion-big-upgrade
He reduced the weight by 35kg. The link is four years old, with newer technology it may be even more worthwhile.