AbramClark
Active Member
Having enjoyed my electric Sofrider so much over the last 1.5 years, I wanted another so both me and my partner could ride assisted and in laid back fashion. I also wanted to try out bringing an electric bike with me on airplane trips, but the 26" wheels may make this impractical. I've yet to find a luggage case to fit it into.
Since I've found my Sofrider motor to be quite overpowered compared to a human powered bike, I decided to make this electric build much lower power, lighter, and efficient. It only adds 12 lbs to the bike instead of ~20, and encourages exercise a lot more given that unlike my first, pedaling is actually required on the steeper hills. I haven't had a chance to test the range, but I imagine it's longer than the typical 50 miles I get from the original with 50% pedaling.
The additions / modifications:
Radical Design Medium panniers (I like Radical Design bags a lot, and I'm putting them on all 3 of my Cruzbikes)
Cute 100H hub motor, 36V 10Ah LiFePO4 battery and s06s controller from bmsbattery.com
180mm rear disc rotor and brake adapter to fit larger hub
Here are some pictures from around San Francisco, and close-up of rear hub motor and bag (currently carrying battery and controller until I get a small dedicated frame bag):
Since I've found my Sofrider motor to be quite overpowered compared to a human powered bike, I decided to make this electric build much lower power, lighter, and efficient. It only adds 12 lbs to the bike instead of ~20, and encourages exercise a lot more given that unlike my first, pedaling is actually required on the steeper hills. I haven't had a chance to test the range, but I imagine it's longer than the typical 50 miles I get from the original with 50% pedaling.
The additions / modifications:
Radical Design Medium panniers (I like Radical Design bags a lot, and I'm putting them on all 3 of my Cruzbikes)
Cute 100H hub motor, 36V 10Ah LiFePO4 battery and s06s controller from bmsbattery.com
180mm rear disc rotor and brake adapter to fit larger hub
Here are some pictures from around San Francisco, and close-up of rear hub motor and bag (currently carrying battery and controller until I get a small dedicated frame bag):