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I have probably been quite fortunate, as my two most impairing failures happened one within reach of a bike shop, and the other during a work week on my 4km commute, so neither hurt me greatly.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 very specific "single point of failure" I tend to mention, to fully inform e-bike newbies, on mid motor e-bikes with chain drive systems, is, as far as I can see, specific only to mid motor chain drive systems.....
Though there are a couple of mid motor systems with drive shafts, but tend to be even more expensive than the usual chain drive mid motor bikes......sadly!!!
If an e-bike company managed to produce a drive shaft version, priced below that of the chain drive mid motor systems, and kept nasty firmware away from the design, they really do have the chance to make some big money.....and have happy customers.
With the present mid motor designs with chains, due to the way the torque is transmitted to the rear wheel, I do not see much of a possible improvement in wear characteristic, in the forseeable future.
Now that statement will really get the mid motor "fans" up and shouting again, because they don't want it to be true. But physics, as einstein would say, rarely change as we might wish them to!
A possible "kwik-fix", might be with really heavy duty chains, running on fully hardened sprockets, all at least twice as wide as the present versions, plus instensive cleaning and lubrication as least once a month, or possibly an old fashioned, fully enclosed, chain guard, to prevent dust/mud/water getting on the chain. My first bike had one a great many years ago!!
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A modern design, in a lightweight material, might reduce the need for chain cleaning and re-lubing!Enclosed chain guard removal | Vintage Lightweight Bicycles
I have been trying to remove the enclosed chain guard on my 53 Churchill De-Lux. That has been an interesting endeavor. The crank had been rubbing the chain guard so I figured it would be best to remove the chain guard and tweak the crank arm just a little. To do this the guard has to be...thecabe.com
regards
Andy
Its what I am as I have always stood up for myself and for anyone weaker, at all times in my 76 year old life. Its how others treat me, other people with no intelligence and no basic good manners.Andy always seems to make his arguments in a combative style.
There are pros and cons to both systems. I own both, and really like both and appreciate their different attributes.
The can bus systems built into mostly the purpose built crank drive bikes serve nobody else but the manufacturer and are a right pita. They are effecting a lot of goods now.
I spoke to a mechanic of a very large crank drive selling bike shop recently and he said that the latest crank drive motors are built for performance and have got lighter and more powerful as a result. In his words they are brilliant to ride but not designed for a commuting role. This was born out when I chatted to Peter at Performance line bearings who told me the bearings on my 2015 Yamaha motor were much more robust than the latest motors. To make the motors lighter the bearings are now less robust than they were and the motors put out more power. If you are competent enough to take full advantage of their performance a high spec full suspension crank drive bike will offer an exhilarating ride. However like any high spec performance machine you need to understand the cost of maintaining such a bike and how long it will last.
I think that the problem is that crank drive bikes are now dominating the market place and someone new to electric bikes without a great deal of knowledge may buy one for a role that a simple geared hub motor bike would be more suitable, cheaper to buy, much cheaper to run, and much cheaper to keep running.
I don,t clean the drive trains of any of my bikes as often as I should. However I keep my chains oiled and keep an eye on chain wear and like soundwave tend to change chains around .5 wear point.
Interestingly, since I started measuring the wear of the chains on my bikes, I have found that although my geared rear hub bikes do take longer to reach this wear point than my crank drive bike, they reach it quicker than I had realised before I started measuring. I think before I measured the wear rate I just kept riding my bikes and the rear hub bikes can be ridden for thousands of miles further and sometimes years longer with a worn chain that a crank drive bike.
The Cassette on my crank drive Yamaha ridden mostly off road has completed 2,393 miles, 3,851km . I have swapped chains at wear limits but as my rear cassette must be getting pretty worn now have put back on a chain I previously took off when it just hit the .5 wear limit and will ride that chain until it is completely worn out. I expect it to get me through the winter. Then with the beginning of nicer weather I will put a new transmission on. This will involve a deep clean of the rear derailleur and replacement of the jockey wheels as well as a new chain, cassette and chain ring.
I like all my bikes to earn their keep but am not fastidious about their appearance. Change the brake pads, oil and change the chains at wear points, and change the tyres.
My Haibike Yamaha that I bought new in March 2015 for £1,750 is seven years old and has completed 16,732 miles.
My Befang rear hub Oxygen Emate that I bought new in June 2011 for £1,399 is eleven years old. The mileage is not recorded on that bike but it will be a lot as it gets used a lot. It did 6,000 miles by the end of its second year.
Note that my Haibike Yamaha was £350 more than my Oxygen which I thought good as it had hydraulic disc brakes rather than mechanical, 9 gears rather than 7, and an air adjustable front fork, all of which are really essential for serious off road riding.
My Yamaha crank drive is an infinitely better climber than my geared rear hub bikes. The rear hubs climb well up to a point, but beyond a certain gradient will bog down and drop out of their efficient power range.
Mmm. We might get somewhere if you took as much trouble reading other poster's opinions as you do expressing your own. Not sure what your dad's occupation has to do with topic or why it's in slightest helpful aliking discussions about chain wear etc to fist fights in navy I have no idea.Its what I am as I have always stood up for myself and for anyone weaker, at all times in my 76 year old life. Its how others treat me, other people with no intelligence and no basic good manners.
Also seen far too often here on pedelec.....
But I have always allowed people who look for a physical fight with me, to have the first punch, not that it did them any good, as my Father, an electrical Engineer, started teaching me boxing when I first started school at age 5, as some other badly brought up little pig, punched me on my first day at school in passing, with no conversation! Just a thump in the stomache....a cowards blow in my book, as we had never even met till he hit me!!!
It was a revelation Iabout bad people that I have never ever forgotten.
Dad afterwards taught me well, as he was a school boxing champion in his youth, he was the one who trained me to never hit anyone first, but I never fought in a ring, as I have a so called "glass nose", which bleeds at the tiniest provocation, and looks far worse than it really is!! I did discover that Bleeding on an opponent, when you are sitting on him and he's getting a red shower, usually stops most school time fights!!
Not Navy ones though!!
Two years later the same little pig picked on me again, and got taken to hospital after about 30 seconds, with a badly damaged nose (that was never right afterwards...), again I allowed him the first punch, but I still got a telling off till I mentioned my first day experience, and he also later admitted it.
A dumb school bully, I still remember his name, Les Cope!!
Its important to remember, that all bullies are dumb (Trump?), as they cannot win verbal fights!
Its the socalled "Dunning Kruger effect"! The Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias whereby people with low ability, expertise, or experience regarding a certain type of task or area of knowledge tend to overestimate their ability or knowledge. Wikipedia
Trump is used as an example, by a US University Professor, David Dunning, teaching the "Dunning-Kruger effect" to Psychology students!
See here:-
You may like this one too:-
and this:-
In the Royal Navy (1963 to 1973), there are occasional fist fights (sad to say!), around one a year for me, of which I can honestly say, I never lost one, but several times I was (correctly) pulled off someone who was being half murdered (red mist?), but they then tried to get in a punch or two on me as I was being held back and unable to dodge! Now Navy Guys don't like that and I was immediately freed to finish my aggressive attacker as I saw fit.
I was never charged with fighting!
But I always gave them the first punch, as I never ever punched anyone first! Navy rules and regs that whoever starts a fight will get the full blame....NOT ME!!
My last really serious fight, was many years ago, in my own dining room, when a girlfriend of my first wife, brought her drunken boyfriend to our party, who challenged me to go outside IMMEDIATELY (village idiot), who was so drunk he could hardly stand up, but had muscles on places where most people did not, except for his very thin legs! I dodged his first attempt at a hit (I was still sober) and he got the "shoe in the face" treatment, street fighting as learned in Trinidad and similar places, as I could imagine that he was far stronger than me in the upper body.
He had very long hair, I always have very short hair even as a boy (today about 6mm, my COVID CUT!), as long hair puts you at a huge disadvantage in any sort of a fight, as he found out!
He actually apologised to me (suddenly sober) when the Police arrived (called by my ex wife, the Police wanted to cart him off!), and the next day he was all the colours of the rainbow!! I sometimes wonder if he ever found out why.......he was SO drunk, he may have thought that I used my fists!!!
A subject that I have as good as forgotten today, only an old man's memories......So sorry to take up so much of your e-bike time on Pedelec.....
I liked the rest of your comments below, they showed good common sense....
Yo
Mmm. We might get somewhere if you took as much trouble reading other poster's opinions as you do expressing your own. Not sure what your dad's occupation has to do with topic or why it's in slightest helpful aliking discussions about chain wear etc to fist fights in navy I have no idea.
You stick to educating us all. Meanwhile I, ll stick with crank drives. Thanks for help.
Great post!Yo
Mmm. We might get somewhere if you took as much trouble reading other poster's opinions as you do expressing your own. Not sure what your dad's occupation has to do with topic or why it's in slightest helpful aliking discussions about chain wear etc to fist fights in navy I have no idea.
You stick to educating us all. Meanwhile I, ll stick with crank drives. Thanks for help.
If your chains have quick links and you can replace the chain yourself, then you could try 'chain rotation'. I keep all my old chains and refit them again as the sprockets wear down as you cant put a new chain on an old sprocket. Better explained below. e.g.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?
The Swizzbee that Nealh owns has an in frame Heinzmann motor driving the left side of the rear wheel via a belt and pulley, deraileur gears on the right for the rider.I'm sure it's been said before, but I'd like to see a mid drive with the motor running it's own strong chain and sprocket on the left side of the wheel, leaving the right side for human input. Obviously it would cost more so probably won't be done.
Clever.If your chains have quick links and you can replace the chain yourself, then you could try 'chain rotation'. I keep all my old chains and refit them again as the sprockets wear down as you cant put a new chain on an old sprocket. Better explained below. e.g.
Someone has a switched on brain! That appears to me to be an excellent way to "fix the problem!"The Swizzbee that Nealh owns has an in frame Heinzmann motor driving the left side of the rear wheel via a belt and pulley, deraileur gears on the right for the rider.
.
Fixing a problem that doesn't exist. Millions of ways to do that.Someone has a switched on brain! That appears to me to be an excellent way to "fix the problem!"
I wonder if the chain wear is seriously reduced or not, does anyone have some facts? Theoretically, chain wear should be about the same as a hub bike.....
regards
Andy
Thank you, that's a fantastic idea - my rear cassette may be too old for that by now, but I may try swapping my new-ish chain for a new one, to see if it also wears in after 70 miles or so...If your chains have quick links and you can replace the chain yourself, then you could try 'chain rotation'. I keep all my old chains and refit them again as the sprockets wear down as you cant put a new chain on an old sprocket. Better explained below. e.g.
Sometimes a mid-drive is the right tool for the job, and for hauling heavy bike trailers up steep hills with my 20" wheeled folding bike, I don't think any legal hub motor would be capable - glad I bought a mid-drive. (A hub motor wasn't available for my bike at the time anyway, turns out I'm glad one wasn't).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.
Furthermore, certain failures of the mid motor unit on some designs, can also stop any torque from the motor or the rider, actually turning the rear wheel.
I call it "the single point of failure", which of course the mid motor brigade hate, because its 100% true, and for them, simply very annoying.
But any good engineer, taken as an average, will simply not buy a mid motor chain drive e-bike, just because they see and understand immediately, why this unfair strain on certain drive components, components originally designed for the level of torque that a human can produce, as being very obvious!
Of course there are also engineers that miss that problem completely, though I myself have yet to meet one!
And as someone else here, fully and correctly mentioned, the 750 Watt motor you have, just makes the chain drive wear problems even worse....a motor, assuming that you live in the UK, is of course totally illegal there. And as someone else here mentioned, apparently his 250 Watt motor, allows these components to have a longer life. If you are every stopped by the Police, or are involved in an accident, that motor may count against you legally.....
The chain component wear problems are only (very) simply physics, nothing more, nothing less.
So you either have to accept the wear effects as "running costs", or change to a hub motor system e-bike, where the torque of the motor actually tends to "reduce" the wear and tear to chain drive components, and they generally, provided they are of reasonable quality, which makes them last even longer than the same components on a traditional non e-bike system, due to the much lower torque being passed through these chain components, on a hub e-bike system.
A further problem with the "Single point of failure", is that if damage occurrs on the chain components, it will usually mean a walk home, or a pickup by a car, as the bike may not have any power drive, human or motor, to the rear wheel.
Whereas the hub e-bike owners, simply remove say the broken chain, get on the bike and simply do "air pedaling", to activate the motor, or simply twist the throttle, to drive home on any remaining battery power.
My first e-bike got me home with the "air pedaling", and the second can be got home with both "air pedaling" and/or "throttle", its a great system.
This same subject gets regularly addressed on Pedelec, with the mid motor e-bike owners, doing the job of being the "nay sayers", because they simply neither understand nor accept simple physics wear and tear, in a system that (in my opinion) was not properly designed for problem free long term riding.....!!
The mid motor owners, appear to be under the impression that as they paid many times the average price of most hub (because of far simpler hub drive mechanics = cheaper) e-bikes, that they bought something "BETTER"! But they really didn't, and they find this MOST galling.
They actually have bought something with many different possibly "built in" failures.....at a far higher cost. Not forgetting that some manufacturers actually install firmware that precludes an informed owner, from maintaining his own e-bike himself, like even replacing a battery,which I find totally appalling!
My second e-bike new, complete with two batteries, cost only a tad more than a replacement motor (may not even be new, just repaired!) for a Bosch e-bike, and where the owner is precluded from installing it himself, and if the guarantee is gone, even has to pay the bike shop to do the work, as well as the price of the motor, around 800 UK pounds plus work at an hourly rate!!!
I hope that you now have a far better understanding of "why", but if you have any further questions, please just ask us all here on Pedelec, as the massive amount of experience here, can help a fellow rider almost always.
regards
Andy
That's a great way to lose teeth! Attack first if there are no witnesses! Leave no witness alive! (joking)But I have always allowed people who look for a physical fight with me, to have the first punch
Objects in contact under pressure damaging each other?Not sure what your dad's occupation has to do with topic or why it's in slightest helpful aliking discussions about chain wear etc to fist fights in navy I have no idea.
If your new chain skips after replacement and you can separate the individual worn sprocket, its also possible to 'dress' or reshape the 'U' of a worn cog with a round file rather than replacing the sprockets. (e.g chainsaw sharpening file). I have done this and it works if the cog is not too badly worn. Explained below.Clever.
I really don't feel that I need it, but when I need to repace the chain/Cassette, I may well try it out, as old Scots try anything to save a few Bob!!
Many thanks.
Andy
On the Swizzbee that wouldn't be possible to assess Andy, since the drive is a balanced one between the motor and belt drive on the left and the deraileur on the right.Someone has a switched on brain! That appears to me to be an excellent way to "fix the problem!"
I wonder if the chain wear is seriously reduced or not, does anyone have some facts? Theoretically, chain wear should be about the same as a hub bike.....
regards
Andy