Thread: eBike News
View Single Post
  #4  
Old September 18th 20, 01:31 AM posted to rec.bicycles.tech
JBeattie
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,870
Default eBike News

On Thursday, September 17, 2020 at 4:08:20 PM UTC-7, Mark J. wrote:
On 9/16/2020 5:45 PM, jbeattie wrote:
I got my wife an eBike for her birthday via my son at Specialized. Box arrived yesterday, and I about herniated myself getting it into the garage.. One of these: https://www.bicycling.com/bikes-gear...o-vado-reivew/ I had no idea it was a Buycycling Editor's choice, but I'll go with it. Being family, I got employee pricing -- otherwise it would have been a harder choice. Even the bottom of the range is expensive, but it is a nice bike.

There were some odd-ball assembly issues, and I still have to update the firmware (which is like a huge thing because you want the latest performance advantages!), but it went together fine. Lots of bells (literally) and whistles.

My wife is 5'10" (or used to be), so my son sized her as a large, which is fine for saddle to pedal distance, but the tire height/BB makes the stand-over high, even with a sloping top-tube. The thing is like a mini-motorcycle. She has some neuro/ortho conditions that affect her mobility, but she seems to be fine swinging her leg over the saddle and off the bike. She doesn't complain, which is sometimes a problem. "Oh its fine [followed by catastrophe]." I do worry about the size of the thing, though.

On max setting, the bike is super fast with a top speed of 28mph. I'm going to throw on a QR seatpost clamp so I can use it for shopping. You would need a truck to steal it, and it has a kickstand and a really swanky little rack. The future is now! My son is trying to get me interested in the mega-zillion dollar 22lb stealth eBikes -- so I can keep up with him, but I would need a winning lottery ticket, even at employee pricing.

In another small bicycle-world twist, my son tells me I'll need a hitch rack tray that my wife can roll the bike onto -- made by Yakima. So I walk down the street and ask my neighbor and best bicycling buddy -- who is head of products for Yakima and happened to be working in his yard, for a rack. Its on the way. Life is good.

-- Jay Beattie.


Enjoy riding together! The Banks-Vernonia trail is a nice venue if you
need some sheltered "acclimatization" riding, but it's better on weekday
mornings. It gets rather crowded on weekends. Just don't use the
"turbo" setting on a busy trail!

That QR seatpost clamp puts you on a slippery slope, be careful. My
wife's ebike is so short I'd need a circus-clown-seatpost to ride it, so
I'm safe from the "dangers" that Lou mentions.


I was flying around on it last night. The dismount is troubling for my wife. I may see if I can exchange the bike for a step-through. My son is trying to get me to go with a dropper post, but I'm not sold on that, but I'll do some more experimenting to see if that could be a fix. I just don't want my wife getting her leg hung up swinging it over the saddle.

My poor wife was a spectacular racer back in the day and a great tandem motor, but she was hit with a neuro-muscular disorder and has wires in her brain to make her stand more upright (DBS for dystonia). She also broke a hip skiing, or it simply broke while skiing -- who knows. Anyway, she is still lean and mean and walks all over the place, but she's held together with screws and wires. The last thing I want is for her to get mugged by her bike. She's tired of hospitals, as is the rest of the family. Between all three of us, we probably have ten pounds of titanium parts.

-- Jay Beattie.









Ads
 

Home - Home - Home - Home - Home