
[video]https://youtu.be/QeGONkq4ymc[/video]
It's advertised with a 200+ mile range (throws large pinch of salt)Kwacky wrote:That looks good. Range and cost are the only factors putting me off an electric bike.
I reckon within three years, 90% of company cars purchased will be all electric. The tax rules from 5 April make it stupid to do otherwise.D41 wrote:Yep. Looks pretty decent.
I doubt there's going to be any fewer petrol stations for a long time. There'll be more electric vehicles, but they'll still be a drop in the bucket. And numbers of petrol/diesel cars are still going to grow and keep pace alongside population growth.
Really.???Kwacky wrote:That looks good. ...
Whilst I agree with the sentiment, that Damon does not fulfil the criteria imho.:duke63 wrote:The bike industry will have to follow the car industry and make electric bikes look futuristic. Once you make the previous generation vehicles look old, they will become redundant.
Precisely mate.kiwikrasher wrote:I think St Marks was more leaning towards the drive motors being in the hubs, not a shaft drive.
I would dispute that any power transmission could be that efficient, let alone an open chain & sprockets setup.?D41 wrote:All other things being equal, a chain drive can be over 98% efficient..
Yep, they really are that good....provided they're taken care of....if they're not then that number will drop off pretty sharpish. It's the main reason why the Lycra-crowd will get obsessed with "bottom-bracket stiffness" on bicycles, as with those that flex, some of the energy "at the cranks" will end up dissipating back into the frame. Ti frames in particular...less with steel, much less with 6061, 7075, etc.StMarks wrote:I would dispute that any power transmission could be that efficient, let alone an open chain & sprockets setup.?D41 wrote:All other things being equal, a chain drive can be over 98% efficient..
As Kiwi said, I was suggesting that having the wheel & power source as one entity (could ? ) obviate any need for power transmission (as well as many other potential improvements).
Kwacky wrote:I suspect at this stage of electric bike development that a chain and sprocket is a lot cheaper and lighter than hub or shaft drive..
My bad, I should have written "sprung weight". ( Shoots down your "always good comments" theoryBlade wrote:....but I'm confused how adding the driver into thr hub will reduced unsprung weight?