suitable specifications for hill climbing bike

opaz

Pedelecer
Feb 13, 2009
36
3
Hi

I read in the FAQs that 200w was about minimum power-wise,for hillclimbing. The hill I need to be climbing (to get home from the station) is about 1.25 miles long and an average of 1:15 gradient. I weigh about 11 stone and am quite happy to peddle 'as if on the flat'.

I see that the Sunlova SL26, which has 250 watts is selling for about £399 but I was expecting to have to pay more than that.

any advice gratefully recieved

opaz
 

Mussels

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 17, 2008
3,207
8
Crowborough
£399 but I was expecting to have to pay more than that.
You are asking very little from an electric bike so most will be very over engineered for the task, there's no reason you need to pay a lot as you don't need a lot of battery capacity.
I have no knowledge of the bike you mention but it may well be perfectly suitable, as always with these make sure you get a test ride first.
BTW have you considered a normal bike but pedalling slightly slower?
 

Hooligooner

Pedelecer
Aug 4, 2008
91
0
HP13
hooligooner.blogspot.com
I also have a choice of mile+ long hills to ride up to get to work, which I believe may be significantly steeper than yours, but I may be wrong. On top of this I weigh a good 5 stone more than you.

My bike was slightly cheaper than the one you are looking at and it gets me up the hill every day with reasonable input from me.

All this bodes well, but I would also recommend you consider the quality of the components your new bike will be made from. I have been plagued by a worrying need to constantly re-adjust the brakes, which I now believe is cable stretch. I am also noticing several patches of rust and one of the pedals has lost it's reflector, only a question of time for the rest to fall off.

If you intend this to be your daily commuting tool, it may be worth looking at a bike known for it's quality and a good read through some old posts here will go a long way to finding that. However I believe my bike will have paid for itself in saved petrol costs if it only lasts another 6 months or so.

Horses for courses.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,300
30,666
Don't take much notice of the quoted 200W or 250W powers, these are merely quoted to match the local legal limits, 200W in the UK and 250W in the EU. In fact most e-bike motors are capable of much more, and that Sunlova will probably be capable of as much as 400W and will easily cope with your hill.

It is a very cheap bike though, and it's 36 Volt lithium battery only 8.5Ah capacity, so the range is very unlikely to be the 35 miles they quote. A lithium battery included at that bike price isn't going to be very good quality and lithium types only last two years if you're lucky, so make sure you will be able to get replacement ones and check how much they will cost.
.
 

opaz

Pedelecer
Feb 13, 2009
36
3
great advice folks, many thanks.

(I notice the sunlova weighs 28kg. That's quite a weight to be heaving up train station stairwells and so on)

Are there any bikes that you'd recommend given my requirements?

cheers

opaz
 

Mussels

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 17, 2008
3,207
8
Crowborough
great advice folks, many thanks.

(I notice the sunlova weighs 28kg. That's quite a weight to be heaving up train station stairwells and so on)

Are there any bikes that you'd recommend given my requirements?

cheers

opaz
That's about the norm, have you got lots of money to burn for the ideal solution or are you budget conscious?
 

opaz

Pedelecer
Feb 13, 2009
36
3
I'm budget conscious, but I don't want to undershoot and get something that I end up not using. Given what has been said above, it seems that a modestly priced bike would get me up my hill, the main consideration should be reliability
 

torrent99

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 14, 2008
395
36
Highgate, London
I'm budget conscious, but I don't want to undershoot and get something that I end up not using. Given what has been said above, it seems that a modestly priced bike would get me up my hill, the main consideration should be reliability
If you already have an ordinary bike you like, one option is to go with a kit. These can be pretty good value, are fairly easy to fit and you know the quality of the donor bike already. A few people on the forum have used the Alien kit...

Otherwise the list of potential bikes is pretty big and growing rapidly ranging from:
Powabyke
Powacycle
Synergie Mistral etc. at the £600ish end

right up to:
Wisper 905se
Kalkhoff
Ezee Torq & Forza etc

etc at the £1200ish end

If you only have a short journey any of these will probably cope. AtoB magazine have reviewed a number of them too, as well as plenty of reviews on this site. Best to pick a few and get some test rides.
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,300
30,666
The Synergie Mistral, currently at £799 has a number of members strongly recommending it, but sadly it seems there will be no more supplies until Nov/Dec according to ElectricBikeSales.

Below that price for a well known brand is the Powacycle Salisbury at £699, but it is quite low powered. It will certainly manage that hill ok, but you would be putting in a little more effort with that. Range is in the 20 to 27 mile area, depending on how much you contribute.

The other low price bikes around tend to be the ones you cannot be certain will be around in a years time, making spares and replacement batteries a potential problem.

N.B. Crossed with torrent99's post.
.
 

opaz

Pedelecer
Feb 13, 2009
36
3
the powacycle salisbury is listed as having 26V 10.5Ah=273 Watt hours. Does this equate to 273 watts? Do you think that would require pedaling possibly more than 'as if on the flat'.

(I'd love to try some of these out for myself, but there aren'tany dealers around here)

opaz
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,300
30,666
The nominal legal power of the Salisbury is the 200W UK figure, but that 273 Wh is the power content of the battery, not the same as the maximum the motor can put out, which in this case is about 300 Watts.

If your hill really is 1 in 15 (6.5%), and you are the same 11 stone as me, the amount of pedal power you'll have to contribute is small. In fact the Salisbury is a reasonable hill climber, but not particularly fast doing it. On the flat it powers to about 13 mph willingly and reaches 15 mph ok, the rest up to you.

Have a look at these three forum member reviews of the Windsor which is identical but step though frame and you'll see what owners think of them:

Powacycle Windsor reviews

Also, this thread by member Danny-K has much more information on the Salisbury:

Danny's Salisbury thread
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Last edited:

Bigbee

Esteemed Pedelecer
Oct 12, 2008
445
1
the powacycle salisbury is listed as having 26V 10.5Ah=273 Watt hours. Does this equate to 273 watts? Do you think that would require pedaling possibly more than 'as if on the flat'.

(I'd love to try some of these out for myself, but there aren'tany dealers around here)

opaz
Where abouts are you opaz?
 

Alex728

Esteemed Pedelecer
Dec 16, 2008
1,109
-1
Ipswich
I own a Salisbury and have recently ridden 26 miles on a couple of occasions between Ipswich and the Mid Suffolk/South Norfolk border, with some sizeable hills enroute.

I will need to do the maths later to get more precise gradients of the hills (last time I tried I mixed my units and got into a big muddle) but they are tall enough for me to find it strenuous on my unpowered pushbike.

The bike still had two lights left on the battery at arrival.

I am roughly the same weight as flecc - but was carrying about 12 kilos in the panniers...

ETS appear to be developing their own version of the Mistral called the Smarta Bike (same frame but maybe a slightly different motor), planned for sale in February.
 

opaz

Pedelecer
Feb 13, 2009
36
3
The nominal legal power of the Salisbury is the 200W UK figure, but that 273 Wh is the power content of the battery, not the same as the maximum the motor can put out, which in this case is about 300 Watts.

.
how do get to the 'motor output' from the power content of the battery?

Also, what's your opinion of folding bikes?
 

carpetbagger

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 20, 2007
744
18
blackburn
Hebden Bridge, west yorkshire. about 7 miles from Halifax
if you have to climb the hill towards Howarth,you will need a good climber... I've only done it in the car but my powabike euro will climb similar hills in my area....
 

Brian-Lopes

Pedelecer
Oct 2, 2008
32
0
I wouldn't advise a kit for a non-electric bike. It isn't ideal weight distribution, not as well sealed against the weather, doesn't look as good, and will be a pain in the ar5e to fit properly. Bikes designed for electronics work much better. Kit=Bodge. It's like the boy racers of the ebike world, would you rather a Ferrari 355 spyder, or a vauxhall Nova with bad boy bodykit, big bore exhaust, and a stupid set of wheels? You know it won't work, the suspension will bottom out, the performance is awful, its unreliable and you look like a pilchard.:D
 

flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,300
30,666
how do get to the 'motor output' from the power content of the battery?

Also, what's your opinion of folding bikes?
The motor power cannot be worked out from the battery voltage and capacity. Only physical measurement or figures from the manufacturer can give the motor power.

Folders are normally inferior to full size bikes, but that doesn't mean they shouldn't be used, and my main electric bike is a folder, albeit a largish one. It depends what you want a folder for, using it on public transport or just for easier stowing at home. If you can say what you'd use the folder for and any model you have your eye on, we can advise further on using one.
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flecc

Member
Oct 25, 2006
53,300
30,666
I wouldn't advise a kit for a non-electric bike. It isn't ideal weight distribution, not as well sealed against the weather, doesn't look as good, and will be a pain in the ar5e to fit properly. Bikes designed for electronics work much better. Kit=Bodge. It's like the boy racers of the ebike world, would you rather a Ferrari 355 spyder, or a vauxhall Nova with bad boy bodykit, big bore exhaust, and a stupid set of wheels? You know it won't work, the suspension will bottom out, the performance is awful, its unreliable and you look like a pilchard.:D
Although what you say is often true, it isn't invariably so. Here are two excellent conversions by members.

The first by BGElect is on a Dahon Speed 7 folder using the Alien kit, a nicely balanced folding bike weighing only 20 kilos so bettering many manufacturers, and with good visual integration of the elements:



The second is a recumbent conversion by Jeremy, using a Tongxin Nano motor and a superbly integrated custom designed below seat battery and a dashboard display. The standards of this conversion are visually superior to many manufacturers bikes:


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Brian-Lopes

Pedelecer
Oct 2, 2008
32
0
Nice. All it needs now is a massive spoiler. And I reckon you could fit some speakers under the seat also........