It depends what you mean by made. Brompton was the last British manufacurer that made the frames and cycle parts. There are still some specialist bike makers that make bikes based on traditional designs, but I don't think any of them do electric versions. Some brands do some basic assembly and checking in the UK, like Cyclotricity, Mirider, Woosh and Wisper(?).I heard recently Raleigh has moved production to europe and getting parts might now be a issue , got me thinking .
So what Ebikes are made in the UK, how many are there?
thanks
I'm really digging their model with sidecar. 50kg sidecar load weight is too low for a normal sized adult, so is 750W for two normal sized adults. I guess the sidecar cockpit could be unbolted and replaced with a larger volume cage for cargo.Cooler King is a UK company, but their bikes are themed on motorcycles and made in China. They appeal to me but I don’t think many on here share my enthusiasm for them.
The sidecar is on the wrong side for our UK roads.I'm really digging their model with sidecar. 50kg sidecar load weight is too low for a normal sized adult, so is 750W for two normal sized adults. I guess the sidecar cockpit could be unbolted and replaced with a larger volume cage for cargo.
Cooler Kub 750S and Sidecar - Dual Removable Battery, 80km+ Range
Split the cost into 6 monthly 0% interest payments from £608pm (Details at Checkout) PRE-ORDER FOR NOV UK / EU DELIVERY The Cooler Kub was designed for two, but how about three? Now we’ve added a detachable sidecar! The 750 watt Cooler Kub is the most comfortable ebike you've ever ridden. With a...cooler.bike
Looks like a dog guided missile. The dog can't jump out of this one to chase squirrels.Yeah side cars are cool.View attachment 59323
I rode sidecar outfits for three years in 1971 to 1074. First an Ariel VB with a home made box on the sidecar chassis, then a Triumph 21 with a Steib SA sidecar. They're very weird at first because of the reversed steering. Everything is wrong about the dynamics of the off-centre mass, drag and momentum, which all work against you once in motion; however, you do get used to it, and it becomes manageable as long as you keep the speed down. Riding in the snow and ice is very safe compared with a solo bike. The one thing that's difficult to deal with is emergency situations, as you cannot steer to avoid things. Every turn needs to be planned in advance by the appropriate use of speed and acceleration. Braking while turning left is simply not possible. With all that in mind, I'd say that those sidecar outfits are not safe enough for modern roads and traffic unless you have a sidecar wheel with at least a brake, and motorised as well, ideally.I rode a sidecar outfit for a couple of years when I was a student. It was a terrible machine with dangerous tendencies, like the sidecar rising up off the road if you turned left at anything but a pedestrian pace. It never braked in a straight line either and how much it veered depended on how heavy your passenger was. The whole idea of such a contraption is a horrific make do, born of a period when people had motorcycles, and a family and not much money, so they cobbled this dangerous contraption together.
Those things may look cool to some people, but if you'd ridden one, you might feel differently.
What are the 'standard chinese bikes'? there seem to be so many.....you'd be better off sticking with a standard Chinese bike. You can still get parts for such bikes that were made 14 years ago. .....
There are many, so just pick one on eBay that you look the like of. Some of them are even UK compliant.What are the 'standard chinese bikes'? there seem to be so many.
Which Zündapp did for the Wehrmacht:I'd say that those sidecar outfits are not safe enough for modern roads and traffic unless you have a sidecar wheel with at least a brake, and motorised as well, ideally.
The ones that have a standard hub-motor, a Hailong type battery, a standard LED or LCD control panel, a standard pedal sensor (torque sensors not allowed) and no phone app associated with them. Basically, check that the battery and control panel are readily available on Aliexpress. Motors are all interchangeable, so you don't need to worry about them.What are the 'standard chinese bikes'? there seem to be so many.
I charged mine up when I first got it, rode 9 miles and then charged it up again and rode it seven miles. I just checked the voltage on the battery output pins when I was trying to free off the stuck power switch. The voltage was 40.3V. After seven miles of riding, that suggests a fairly meagre sipping of battery power and a decent range as long as you are not racing and letting the motor do all the work. I am hoping the battery on this thing will be good, and it does look like it. That battery is at around 83% after 7 miles! I'm surprised.The ones that have a standard hub-motor, a Hailong type battery, a standard LED or LCD control panel, a standard pedal sensor (torque sensors not allowed) and no phone app associated with them. Basically, check that the battery and control panel are readily available on Aliexpress. Motors are all interchangeable, so you don't need to worry about them.
In summary, if it has a Hailong type battery, it's probably OK as long as they don't claim that the bike has any unique features, like tilt control, belt drive, auto-locking and stuff like that.
That £360 argos bike is the perfect example. Every electrical component can be swapped with other standard ones. The battery, controller and control panel can be easily upgraded to whatever you prefer. The bike itself has all standard bike parts that you find on any catalogue bike. They can all be upgraded or changed if you want. They're all proven to be robust and reliable. A bike like that should last for years until the battery gets tired. The chance of something going wrong is extremely low.
You and I have had many similar experiences. That span of 'outfit riding is similar to mine, only I dumped mine in 1974 for a 1960 Morris Thousand - mine was an 850cc engine.I rode sidecar outfits for three years in 1971 to 1074. First an Ariel VB with a home made box on the sidecar chassis, then a Triumph 21 with a Steib SA sidecar. They're very weird at first because of the reversed steering. Everything is wrong about the dynamics of the off-centre mass, drag and momentum, which all work against you once in motion; however, you do get used to it, and it becomes manageable as long as you keep the speed down. Riding in the snow and ice is very safe compared with a solo bike. The one thing that's difficult to deal with is emergency situations, as you cannot steer to avoid things. Every turn needs to be planned in advance by the appropriate use of speed and acceleration. Braking while turning left is simply not possible. With all that in mind, I'd say that those sidecar outfits are not safe enough for modern roads and traffic unless you have a sidecar wheel with at least a brake, and motorised as well, ideally.
Do people still have "adventures!" like that anymore in this "modern" age?You and I have had many similar experiences. That span of 'outfit riding is similar to mine, only I dumped mine in 1974 for a 1960 Morris Thousand - mine was an 850cc engine.
What you say about the snow is certainly true, and I would add bad fog to your 'better than solo'. I used to ride mine up and down between Newcastle and London when I was a student and one time, being the world's worst mechanic, I had 'adjusted' the chain in Newcastle at my mum's house, and set off for London, only I had set the wheel out of line and as I climbed a hill on the A1 near Tadcaster the engine (650 BSA A10) roared and dropped the chain on the road. I thought I was tooled up for every eventuality, recovered the chain and got out my big old chain tool and spare link, but when I looked at the chain, it was horribly shredded all through its length. With another 190 miles to go and a big load in the side car (all my gear and my girlfriend' stuff) I got it towed into a local garage for storage, and took a massive amount of gear on buses and the train and eventually ended up in Twickenham. Next day - a mate of mine with a BSA 250 - I think it was a B25, high compression thing and rather flashy, came with me to Blades the motor bike parts shop in Twickenham and got a new A10 Gold Flash chain (or so we thought). We set off up the A1 for Tadcster. It was the dead of winter. I am thinking it was just after the Christmas holiday, and we were pretty cold.
We offered up the chain the complete Knacker at Blades's had sold us and it was the wrong size. Turned out it was for a BSA A65, so we rode to Leeds and got the right chain, went back to Tadcaster, and fitted it.
By now it was pretty late and nearly dark and it was also foggy. Off we went back down the A! at about 45 miles an hour and the fog got worse and worse and started freezing up in my beard and hair poking out under the helmet. Pitch dark and a white out of fog. Pretty soon, Brian my mate was riding pretty much blind at 30 miles an hour and he could not keep the bike steady because he was losing his visual reference as to where vertical was. For me it was easy . The thing just sat there on three wheels and all I had to do was not run off the road. So I overtook him and led the way all the way down. he said that once he could see my two tail lights he knew how to steer straight. At one point, my A10 engini started misfiring badly, so I pulled off into a lay by and took a look - feeling really, rather than looking, because I had no torch and only Brian's headlight to help me. The magneto cam had come loose.It was a sort of weird oval ring with the points flying around in the middle and the cam ring had lost one of its little machine screws, the other was loose and and the cam ring was floating about, hence the terrible ignition timing problem. I hunted around in the bottom of the boot compartment on the side car and could not find one anything like it, but there were some tiny wood screws, so I stuffed a bit of match stick in the hole that I had picked up in the lay by and put the wood screw in, and that got us home, albeit with a few pops and bangs from the mis-timed engine.
So that's how a sidecar can help you in fog. It can keep you vertical when you can't see anything.