Transporting E-bikes are a nightmare!

georgehenry

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 7, 2015
1,447
1,264
Surrey
I had a bit of a nightmare with the CAN bus system on my Skoda. Knowing I might tow a trailer or use a tow bar mounted bike carrier I stipulated a factory fitted tow bar when I bought the car new in March 2018.

In the end I made no use of the tow bar until last year when I wanted to take an old rear hub bike of mine on holiday to be able to fetch shopping to and from a beech hut in Devon with no close by car parking.

Torquay 22 08 20 003.JPG

I bought an excellent and very reasonable tow bar mounted bike rack from Amazon for £85. It did not come with a light board, but I already had one and just simple added a made up plate with the new cars registration.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B006WNC5NE/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

I was only transporting one electric bike, but an old and heavy one, even with the battery removed. This cheap tow bar mounted carrier was excellent, very solid with no discernible movement with the bike on board at whatever speed you decided to go. In my case at least 70 mph where permitted.

That carrier is really very good for the money, and its 45kg weight limit should make carrying two ebikes possible if you remove both batteries (advisable anyway) and both seat posts.

Job done I thought.

However I was unaware that electric hook ups had changed and my new Skoda had a 13 pin electric hook up with Can bus and my old light board was 7 pin.

The car would not recognize the 7 pin connector and much more worrying would not even allow you to reverse without slamming the brakes on and setting of a loud warning siren inside the car. We found a way of disabling this in the cars settings, but it reset every time you turned the car of, and more importantly no lights illuminated on the light board.

On holiday I managed to buy an adapter, but still had no joy.

When back home I bought a new 13 pin light board and it then communicated with the car and all worked as it should.
 
Last edited:

richtea99

Esteemed Pedelecer
May 8, 2020
441
285
Light ebikes with removable batteries (Fazua-based for example) are no heavier/harder to load than the average bike. We put ours on the top or inside our estate car, depending on the day & number of bikes to be transported.

Light ebikes with fixed batteries (Orbea, Ribble, Faro, etc) are slightly more awkward, but only by 2-3Kg.

It's not their main selling point, but if you've not yet bought an ebike and you intend transporting it, it's certainly something to consider.
Then that £500-600 could go towards a better/different bike, rather than being absorbed by ancilliary equipment.
 
Last edited:

sjpt

Esteemed Pedelecer
Jun 8, 2018
3,852
2,763
Winchester
We don't usually try to carry bikes by car any more; lots of shortish rides near home, and holidays are generally for walking. Slight change this year as my wife's knee is still playing up after a slip and broken kneecap in January; walks are very limited, but a bit more freedom with rides on the electric tandem.

So we though we'd take the tandem on holiday with us this year and did some experiments loading on the roof. After some experiments we found a fairly easy way to get it on; remove pedals etc from left side and turn bars, by tying it to a sheet of ply we could lift the front over the back of the car and slide it forwards. However, we have a short car (Skoda Roomster) so with the back of the tandem level with the back of the car the front was protruding well over the windscreen and I decided there was no way to make it really safe for a long motorway drive.

Looks like a real old persons' holiday for us this year; maybe we'll be younger again for autumn or for next year.
 

Michael Price

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 7, 2018
277
177
I always thought e bikes were for cycling with the aid when needed of the battery

not for transporting Mmm Ok cant be that good or that fit if transporting

unless your going a fair few miles :)
Sometimes you might want to take them with you when you go away on holiday
Or maybe you just want a change of scenery
They need to be transported for the same reasons as normal bikes - but as they are heavier you have to take this into account
 

georgehenry

Esteemed Pedelecer
Nov 7, 2015
1,447
1,264
Surrey
As I said above, take the batteries off, remove the seat post and saddle and the tow bar bike rack I bought should take two bikes and is just under £90 on amazon, so very affordable. My lardy 2011 Oxygen Emate travelled to Devon on it and was solid as a rock.
 
  • Like
Reactions: richtea99

Danidl

Esteemed Pedelecer
Sep 29, 2016
8,611
12,256
73
Ireland
How to answer this?. Getting a towhitch is the single most useful accessory for a car. So yes bite the bullet and get one. And if it needs garage fitting ..so what?. If you DIY, you could be buying trouble. The Halfords do have half decent 2 and 3 bike tow hitch mounted racks. I have used it for 2 heavy Ebilkes. Word of warning , remove the battery pack and the controller gizsmo ,if it detaches and carry these in the boot.
Or for a few quid extra you can buy a full blown trailer. Once you have it , you can drop the bikes into it, bring stuff to dumps, go camping .. make friends and influence people.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TedG

vidtek

Esteemed Pedelecer
Mar 29, 2015
423
243
74
Bournemouth BH12
I changed my vehicle for an electric Leaf a while ago. They do not come with towbar homologation from Nissan so I bought one from a shop in Las Vegas off ebay, a really nice Hayman-Reese hitch 1 1/4" detachable neck Curt hitch. As there are no wheels on the ground it is perfectly legal according to VOSA.
IMG_20200910_094751_0.jpg
IMG_20200921_095131.jpeg
The Thule rack fits beautifully stable and rock-solid.
 
Last edited:

Andy-Mat

Esteemed Pedelecer
Oct 26, 2018
2,214
562
78
I always thought e bikes were for cycling with the aid when needed of the battery

not for transporting Mmm Ok cant be that good or that fit if transporting

unless your going a fair few miles :)
My way was some years ago I bought a small trailer for carrying the luggage, as the dog sits there in the car, and takes up the whole rear of our Estate Car.

For bikes I added Roofbars to the trailer, and I can fit two bikes on it, which are then msotly in the wind shadow of the car, and as we are legally limited for speed with a trailer, the difference with the MPG is not worth mentioning! Possibly less than my normal driving possibly. It would save money on MPG compared to most vans I feel.
My car is a 6 seater, and we can still take passengers, and have travelled to and from the UK with 4 adults and the dog!
The trailer is used often for other things as well during the year and has a good "lid" that has never let water in, but I always pack stuff into plastic bags, just in case...
Regards
Andy
 

vidtek

Esteemed Pedelecer
Mar 29, 2015
423
243
74
Bournemouth BH12
I always thought e bikes were for cycling with the aid when needed of the battery

not for transporting Mmm Ok cant be that good or that fit if transporting

unless your going a fair few miles :)
I just pootle along 6-10mph on my e-bike. I don't understand the lycra louts - head down oblivious to their surroundings getting the last possible bit of speed as they belt along.

I like to take the electric car with the bike on the back to Hengistbury Head on a Monday when all the grockles aren't there, but don't want to cycle all through the town from Poole to get there. That's unpleasant, riding through urban areas. I also like to take the bike to the New Forest once again not pleasant in the urban areas. With my ev and ebike I reckon I've got the environment sussed. I can no longer do long walks since a vehicle write-off but I can get on my bike. It's really great in the Spring and Autumn when there are fewer grockles in the New Forest, you can hear and see all the wildlife on your bike.
 
  • Like
Reactions: RogerA

Advertisers