I ride with a mid-drive Bafang 750w kit. I have to replace the rear sprocket at least three times a year which gets expensive. Does anyone else have this problem?
All mid motor e-bikes with a chain drive will ALWAYS suffer more chain and sprocket wear, simply because all the motor AND the human developed torque travel via the relatively weak, chain drive.I ride with a mid-drive Bafang 750w kit. I have to replace the rear sprocket at least three times a year which gets expensive. Does anyone else have this problem?
I have had 2x 250 Watt rear hub e-bikes, they are the only legal ones here allowed.A friend bought a 250w hub drive ebike, it burnt out within a week. Tough hills here in north Wales. I've owned this 750w mid-drive for five years now, love it and would never change.
My Haibike (mid drive, obviously) has done 6000 hard off road miles on 2 chains, 2 rear cassettes and original chain ring. I weigh 105kg and I am very hard on chains/sprocketsI have had 2x 250 Watt rear hub e-bikes, they are the only legal ones here allowed.
The first bike was a cheapo, and I paid around 180 UK Pounds for it, 12 months old, and I covered around 30,000 Kms, over 8 years, riding in all weathers except snow and ice. I used 2 new chains and one new cassette, plus new tyres, tubes and brake blocks (Vee brakes) each year. I gave it away still running....It was still runnning over a year later (only one battery, correctly charged of course!), the last time I met the owner....
My second e-bike, also a rear hub, was brand new, I still have it, but I have not kept an accurate log of the distances covered, but I expect it to be about the same per year as the old one, and other than newt yres, tubes each year, and new brake pads about 2 to 3 times a year, nothing else has been needed.... I live in a very hilly part of Germany, about 25 miles north of Frankfurt, and I go "mountaineering" with my dog running beside me..... hard work for the motor and the brakes. It wears the dog out too!!
It sounds like your friend bought a crap bike if it only lasted a week, did he get his money back? I would have!!
The beauty for me about hub bikes is that the drive system, just by its nature, is more efficient and far simpler, therefore less power is wasted in the transmission system, as any qualified engineer will tell you, plus the motor is more open to the air, and far less likely to overheat, than a mid motor, and far, far less complex, and also less likely to have manufacturer's restrictive firmware.....
There are good and bad bikes around, both cheap and very expensive, as the old proverb says "You pays your money and you makes your choice!"
regards
Andy
Actually, my obsession is designed more to inform people, particularly newbies, of the pros and cons of the different styles and designs of e-bikes. I learned via friends who bought Bosch bikes, around the time that I bought my first e-bike (2nd hand) of the awful problems some were having getting problems fixed by Bosch representatives.Andy-Mat has an obsession against mid-drive.
Ridden hard, I would guess that is simply par for the course, and has to be expected from both the illegal motor wattage, and the usage. Driven less hard would maybe reduce usage, but by how much?They certainly get through chains and sprockets more than hub drives. A 750w motor used on hard hills certainly will though, I can't judge if your wear is beyond even what to expect from that.
A single point of failure on mid motors only, not on a hub. Reminder, losing the chain on a dark night, when its just starting to rain, is far less problemetic on a hub, as you get to ride home if you still have battery power....The chain is also a single point of failure as he says; but only one of many single points of failure in any bike, and easily fixed if you carry a chain tool. There may be other failure points in a badly designed mid-drive units, or ones that are overstressed. As there are in badly designed hub motors.
Sad problem, where some manufacturers feel its good to screw the customer base to make more money.He's also right about Bosch and other proprietary systems, most of which (but not all) are mid-drive, but that doesn't apply to your Bafang.
Maybe you have only expereinced far less than perfect hub e-bikes (what makes and models please, to help our newbies to avoid them?), and I have been lucky with both of mine, but I have yet to see any difference with regard to my hub bikes compared to other riders and going up hill, and I am now 76 years old!The benefits of crank drive are huge where you have tough hills.
You are comparing a human, who in fine fettle can supply about 100 watts continuously, to a 750 watt motor? Where are you getting your facts from???My Haibike (mid drive, obviously) has done 6000 hard off road miles on 2 chains, 2 rear cassettes and original chain ring. I weigh 105kg and I am very hard on chains/sprockets
Your obsession against mid drive does not make sense at all.
Torque and its rapid inappropriate (mid gear) application kills chains and sprockets. Modern pedelecs neither apply torque rapidly or at wrong time. The rider does. The torque produced by most powerful ebike motor simply pales into insignificance at side of some heavy rider stood on a static crank pedal( or at mid gear change.) Perthaps you need to modify your gear changing strategy if your crank driver bike is destroying chains etc so prematurely.
I, ve tried hub drive (legal) ebikes and to be honest they simply can not compete with their mid drive legal counterparts. I actually found them bordering on useless for off road climbing.(and slow steep road ones)
Just completed 2000 miies on Giant Fathom e2..Original chain, chain ring, cassette and derailleur still fine.???
@georgehenry - You are absolutely correct, thanks for the tip - it took about 72 miles for my new chain to wear into the old cassette, which saved my buying a new cassette.However rather than immediately change the cassette I have added some miles and always found the grumbling cogs to settle down after 50 to 100 miles and get better each ride you do. The new chain kind of bedding in with the part worn cassette despite the previous chain being changed inside the wear limit.
Thanks for the reply (assuming that you are replying to my question of course), but none of these are specific to a hub bike, as I asked. In fact they are applicable to any bike, electric or not, except the last one......The contents of my tool and spares kit are strongly influenced by 'single point of failure analysis' and has gradually grown from pump, puncture kit and tube to include gear cable, chain quicklink, chain tool and spare wheel sensor pickup.
Always had a bike shop close enough to bail me out when something I hadn't thought of broke, so far!
How true!It has always been siad on this forum a hub bike is far sueperior in reliability for any riding bar sport mtb riding, they are in the whole pretty bullet proof.
It is brands , brand sellers and a verciferous few with very deep pockets who poo poo hub bikes. It's like buying a ferrari or maserati to use as a shopping car .