E-Bike upgrades
 

[Closed] E-Bike upgrades

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Afternoon all,

Hope you've had a good Christmas.

I've had about a decade off bikes - I used to race XC, I lived in Morzine working and racing, but crashed on a race that tore my left inner thigh and nuts (oh it still hurts + needs injections every year) which kept me off any pedal bike as cycling re-tears the muscle!!

All until I got an e-bike as a test - Merida e-120
I've now done 1700 miles this year - although 1000 of those were drowned in guilt of having to have the assist on all the time - though I did restrict the eco mode massively to make me feel like I was cycling!

Anyway, I want to upgrade the bike, any have an idea on below;

1 - It has Shimano XT 2 pot callipers, will I get a more firmer leaver through upgrading to a 4 pot on the rear - there's no air in it, it's been bled and only running standard hoses -??

2 - does anyone h=know of a way to have a 'powerpack' with me for when the battery wears out - in summer I can get it to 50 miles, and about 28 in winter on the slop, but I need to find a way to carry a reserve charge without carrying a spare battery on some trips

Sorry for the long intro, I always feel like I need to justify why I have an e-bike!

Look forward to hearing from you

Elliott


 
Posted : 31/12/2019 3:36 pm
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Lots of Ebikes do extender batteries which fit in a bottle cage and plug in somewhere...


 
Posted : 31/12/2019 9:26 pm
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Can’t offer any advice regarding the range extender battery, but can on the brakes.  I’d definitely recommend some decent four piston brakes. I’ve got 2 piston SLX brakes on my 14.3kg analog bike and 4 piston SLX’s on my 22kg ebike.  The ebike has 200mm rotors front and rear, and the brakes are strong, but not eye-popping - they still need a really firm squeeze to stop the bike quickly (I weigh 90kg with all my winter gear on).  Comparing my analog and ebike, I’d say the brakes feel about equal - but I would want anything less powerful than the four piston SLX’s on the ebike!

HTH


 
Posted : 31/12/2019 9:37 pm
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Having rode an E-bike with Shimano Deore 2pot brakes and then upgrading to SRAM Guide RE's (4 Pot), the difference is night and day.

I wouldn't ride an E-bike with 2 pot brakes again.


 
Posted : 31/12/2019 9:49 pm
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does anyone h=know of a way to have a ‘powerpack’ with me for when the battery wears out – in summer I can get it to 50 miles, and about 28 in winter on the slop, but I need to find a way to carry a reserve charge without carrying a spare battery on some trips

Finds place halfway round the route to stash a second battery you’d only have to carry the latter half of the circuit.


 
Posted : 31/12/2019 10:27 pm
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There are some range extenders out there, as I recall BMZ make some but there are others.


 
Posted : 31/12/2019 11:14 pm
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The range extender packs don’t really work with bikes that have an external battery. They are also not very good value if you look at the cost/Wh.

There are several packs like the XLC that are designed for carrying a spare battery.


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 1:15 am
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If you plan on halfway being a cafe stop buy a fast charger, lighter and cheaper than another battery. I got a bosch one when I got the bike, very handy unless your battery isn't bosch 🤔
Aftermarket brake discs are getting to the 220mm mark, work getting one and seeing how it feels, I've got magura mt7's on my cube and they're a rather good 4 pot 😍


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 10:40 am
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Happy new year guys.

Thanks for the replies.
I've ordered a rear 4 pot XT calliper.
I don't feel I need it on the front as the lever feel is crisp and out on the trails I rarely use the front, but do rely on the back more.

I'll look in to the battery options, i'm tempted to change the rear cassette - it's an 11-46!!
last one I bought was 11-32 and I know I don't use the top three gears of the cassette.

All the best


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 12:22 pm
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I don’t feel I need it on the front as the lever feel is crisp and out on the trails I rarely use the front, but do rely on the back more.

The front brake is the one you use when you really need to stop. If the front has a good, crisp feel, but the back doesn't, then the problem is most likely that the rear hasn't been properly bled. The longer hose with a lot more bends can make it difficult to get all the air out of a back brake.


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 12:40 pm
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Front brake for stopping, rear brake for skidz.


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 12:51 pm
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I *think* smudge at MTB batteries can do extender packs?


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 12:56 pm
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I don’t feel I need it on the front as the lever feel is crisp and out on the trails I rarely use the front, but do rely on the back more.

crashed on a race that tore my left inner thigh and nuts

🤔


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 7:34 pm
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thanks, i'll google it now

All the best


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 11:28 pm
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I'm a lot slower now!!!!


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 11:29 pm
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Can I just say op, you've got to be the politest poster on stw!


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 11:32 pm
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thanks

hope you're well


 
Posted : 01/01/2020 11:38 pm
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See what I mean!?👍

Yeah, all good here my friend and a belated Happy New Year!


 
Posted : 02/01/2020 9:31 am