Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 44 total)
  • Tern knockoffs
  • petefromearth
    Full Member

    In the market for a smallish e-cargo bike like a Tern HSD or Quick Haul however they are very hard to come by at the moment.

    Unsurprisingly there are cheap alternatives out there. came across this one on eBay, the price difference is pretty staggering.

    https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/325231931807

    Any thoughts? No doubt it will be reflected in the quality of parts used.

    Also Tern are the brand leader so likely you pay a premium for the name.

    I’m less au fait with motors and batteries though so no idea how the Panasonic system compares to Bosch.

    The claimed weight is actually less than the Quick Haul which is quite impressive.

    FOG
    Full Member

    The Panasonic part is just the battery, the motor is a Bafang which is fairly common so should be easy to get parts for.
    Otherwise I know nothing!

    survivor
    Full Member

    It’s got a hub motor and mid drive in the pictures but only mentions the hub motor in the description!

    Remember. You get what you pay for…

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    No battery in the pictures either.

    (Which btw seems to be the smallest e bike battery in existence today)

    sillyoldman
    Full Member

    Like the picture of the silver bike where the chain crosses from left to right front to rear.

    I’d avoid anyone that offers to ship a product with a throttle.

    petefromearth
    Full Member

    I think the battery is actually the lump in the middle by the BB, looks like what would be the motor on a Bosch system

    I definitely am believer in “you get what you pay for” and regretting not already buying a Tern tbh!

    t3ap0t
    Free Member

    Radwagon seems to be the cheapest of the e cargo bikes. See quite a few of them around in Bristol. Not looked if there is a history of them having issues or not.

    Tern might have a good rep, they also seem to have an issue with welds failing on their folding bikes.

    doomanic
    Full Member

    https://velosta.co.uk/

    It looks like a mid drive because that’s where they’ve hidden the battery.

    petefromearth
    Full Member

    I’d avoid anyone that offers to ship a product with a throttle

    Agreed! Sounds well dodgy, especially for a bike that most people will use for carrying their kids

    survivor
    Full Member

    https://velosta.co.uk/

    It looks like a mid drive because that’s where they’ve hidden the battery.

    Not a terrible idea if using a hub motor I suppose.. keeps the weight low down.

    leffeboy
    Full Member

    I’m guessing that they have used a frame mount for something that takes a BB motor and fitted a battery in there instead to avoid designing something new (and it also tricks people a bit).  They then pair that with a cheap hub motor

    gowerboy
    Full Member

    It looks like a reasonable attempt at a Tern style copy… apart from the Möbius strip silver version. Interestingly there are a lot of high end GSD inspired bikes now by for eg. R&M, Moustache, etc. as well as Benno. But they all cost about the same. The Radwagon seems to be the only budget GSD style bike that is going mainstream and I understand that it is fair value for money.

    I would definitely want to test ride an unknown brand as I suspect it’s not that easy to make a copy that rides well under load. It really could be a buy cheap buy twice situation.

    I have a Gen 1 GSD and while it’s not absolutely perfect it is really good although it has only done 6500 miles so far. I have bought a Quick Haul for my daughter which is also excellent and I recon is a fair price.

    kayak23
    Full Member

    Like the picture of the silver bike where the chain crosses from left to right front to rear.

    Oh yeah. Chain line by Mc Escher 😂

    petefromearth
    Full Member

    Wtf! Alarm bells!! Looks like someone can use Photoshop, but isn’t sure how a bike works

    dovebiker
    Full Member

    I did look at a Radwagon but the relative heft and tales of being underpowered put me off – I bought a Moustache with Bosch drive for the same money.

    There’s also this from Mycle Which looks like a Radwagon copy with more grunt.

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    The biggest alarm bell is that that stem steerer qr arrangement is not fit for a cargo bike. The number of them I saw snapped at the weld from fatigue and leverage on cheap folding bikes is criminal they are still being sold.

    swanny853
    Full Member

    Calling the radwagon underpowered is probably harsh. ‘Less powered’, perhaps, but (I have one) it’s mostly down to the range the motor is geared for. I haven’t done any serious load lugging in a while (1 year old + associated pile of stuff is the usual) but it will, for example, take most of the strain off a rider on a pedal bike who chooses to hang on up a one chevron hill. My local two chevron hill is about the only thing round here that requires you to put any work in and even that’s not exactly breaking a sweat territory.

    All that said- it doesn’t feel like a mid motor when it comes to going up hill, it definitely does bog down at lower speeds and that feels a bit disappointing, but after a year I don’t think it really matters from a practical point of view. Drivetrain should last longer with a hub drive too.

    If you live somewhere where you’re constantly going to be going up and down really steep hills, or fairly steep hills with really big loads, the hub vs mid drive is likely make or break. If it’s an occasional thing I’d say it doesn’t need to be that high on your list.

    I’d still love a tern, but I could buy two radwagons instead… The two things I’d really like from the tern are actually more to do with packaging- the rad doesn’t have that neat ‘park on the rear rack’ feature and is just generally bigger and chunkier to store. Probably more equivalent to the benno to be honest.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    If you can live without the “E”, then you can still pickup OFO bikes for <£100.

    I’m mildly irritated that mine won’t take a mid-drive conversion. But then in however many years of abuse I’ve only had to the odd repair.
    Seatpost broke, saddle is now sagging, tyres have lost their shape, front rack needed it’s bracket repairing. Which for the abuse I’ve given it isn’t a bad run! I’ve got some Schwalbe marathons to go on it, and still considering a front wheel hub motor just to lend a hand up the motorway bridge when fully loaded.

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    If you can live without the “E”, then you can still pickup OFO bikes for <£100.

    … “E and cargo” surely. . Meaning rather than the original brief of an “e cargo bike” he will have a “bike” ? Albe it a cheap one

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    “E and cargo” surely. . Meaning rather than the original brief of an “e cargo bike” he will have a “bike” ? Albe it a cheap one

    A tern isn’t really a ‘cargo’ bike though is it? It’s a town bike with front and rear baskets/racks, like an OFO

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    Which term ? The gsd is a low COG long tail. While you have got that big box on there it’s hardly a reasonable location.

    Would have been much nicer on the low long tail deck if given the choice.

    Like wise if you had a couple of kids to carry . Terns built for it and handling won’t be utterly horrible in the same was it will be once you shoe horn them onto the ofo.

    akira
    Full Member

    If you’re getting any ebike, buy local. So much easier for the inevitable updates and bits and pieces that will need done. Random eBay with a throttle, most shops won’t touch them.

    HoratioHufnagel
    Free Member

    I looked at these whilst hunting for a cheaper cargo bike, they seem to be a lot smaller than they look in the ebay pic…

    A tern GSD….

    In the end we managed to get a 2nd hand 2019 Radwagon. I think it’s technically illegal though as it’s got a 750w motor (which feels less powerful than the 250w Shimano motor on my emtb) and a throttle, tho this suggests throttle is ok…
    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/electrically-assisted-pedal-cycles-eapcs/electrically-assisted-pedal-cycles-eapcs-in-great-britain-information-sheet#:~:text=General%20requirements%20%2D%20EAPC%20classification,-The%20EAPC%20regulations&text=The%20requirements%20are%20the%3A,the%20vehicle%20reaches%2015.5%20mph

    Ours gets up hills with 2 kids on just fine, plus it’s got regenerative braking so you get some power back on the way down!

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Which term ?

    The one* the OP is talking about.

    *well, an off-brand Quickhaul

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    Yeah if you squint it’s mint. But it ain’t a tern. The hsd he actually wants is a long tail as I mentioned

    gowerboy
    Full Member

    A tern isn’t really a ‘cargo’ bike though is it? It’s a town bike with front and rear baskets/racks, like an OFO

    I would suggest that the GSD, HSD and Quick Haul are definitely cargo bikes. They are built to take and handle well with the extra weight and have a plethora of accessories made to help you load them.

    My GSD is pretty heavy and overbuilt for a simple town bike.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    would suggest that the GSD, HSD and Quick Haul are definitely cargo bikes.

    The hsd he actually wants is a long tail as I mentioned

    Indeed, except as he pointed out those are £4k-£6k.

    So the alternative was something that looked like a quickhaul but for 1/4 the price.

    I know this is STW, but if the criteria is “Y is 4x too expensive”, then the answer to the question isn’t “Y”.

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    Y is 4x too expensive”, then the answer to the question isn’t “Y”.

    Yes I believe the answer is infact 7

    petefromearth
    Full Member

    Thanks all. Fully aware it’s not a Tern and it’ll be less good in various ways. Just interesting to know what £2k less gets you.

    Other than the obvious concerns about the seller/brand being a teensy bit cowboy, the fact the motor and battery may be rubbish, and have zero support, I’ll look elsewhere!

    Interesting to hear thoughts on other brands like radwagon and benno too.

    jkomo
    Full Member

    Didn’t decathlon do one for the Europeans only.
    See if you can get one shipped to a willing friend.
    If you have any.
    In Europe.

    https://ebiketips.road.cc/content/news/decathlon-has-released-an-e-cargo-bike-the-elops-r500e-longtail-3721?amp

    https://www.decathlon.de/p/e-lastenfahrrad-cargobike-r500e-longtail/_/R-p-329177

    swanny853
    Full Member

    Other thoughts on the radwagon, in no particular order.

    It’s great fun, I’ve don’t think I’ve broken double figures on solo car trips within my local area in the nearly-a-year we’ve had it.

    It is an absolute tank to move about though. I need to build a more convenient house for it as my other half can’t brute it up the steps to where it lives now.

    Component spec is built to a price but entirely functional for the job. I was expecting to change the brakes for something beefier in short order and probably still will at some point, but I feel no pressing need. Gears are fine. Lights are be seen only, we use battery lights to see where we’re going on dark lanes. That’s a planned upgrade if it’s used enough in the dark this winter to justify the convenience.

    Kickstand is very useful but I recommend covering the feet with a bit of old tyre or similar as they scrape.

    Get the front rack not basket, much more flexible. I regret my decision to get the basket!

    The big thing I’d say is to think about whether you ‘really’ need the long tail as it adds quite a bit of weight and awkwardness to the bike. I’m expecting to get a lot more use out of the longtail as Cygnet853 gets bigger but if that wasn’t the case and I was replacing it I’d seriously think about a short ebike and a trailer for occasions when i needed the cargo space.

    petefromearth
    Full Member

    Cheers, useful to hear. Had the same thoughts about the GSD, just feels a bit too big and hefty for the majority of trips it’d be used for. I’ll find out next week as we’re hiring one to use around London!

    dyna-ti
    Full Member

    I think the only problem with tern and many of that ilk is they’re one size fits all, when in fact as we all know, it doesn’t.

    Great if you are about 5’9″, but too small or to tall its a bit off.

    benp1
    Full Member

    That does look quite small. I really liked the GSD, still do, but it was a lot of money. I’m using a Surly Big Dummy with a bafang kit. Very useful for local stuff or mini trips with the kids. Will take a lot of stuff though it does get unwieldy at the top end – recently had a full supermarket trip of stuff plus two kids, that was a heavy bike with a wobbly trip home!

    Have you got somewhere to store it ok? My big dummy is huge, the GSD can stand up on its end which I thought was a neat feature.

    thepodge
    Free Member

    I borrowed a GSD for a while, it was good but not without fault. Getting it on the upright stand isn’t easy & if you have room to do it, you’ve probably room to store it normally.

    I’d happily go for one of these Velosta but then I ham happy tinkering & swapping stuff… which I’d do on the Tern anyway.

    Olly
    Free Member

    a lot of Radwagons round here, people seem universally pleased with them.
    couple of Mycles popping up to.

    RE hub motors: i looked at the differences, and Hub motors never have the same torque for the 250W limit. more like 40Nm, where as a mid drive will give you 90Nm.
    Having said that, they are much cheaper, and they dont eat up your drive chain! a mid drive will go through chains and sprockets much much quicker (obviously)
    A hub motor isnt adding any wear anywhere (one tyre, nominally)
    Also, if the Hub motor does fail, you can remove all the e-bits and still ride the bike! Hub motors are pretty integral. Dead motors is a dead bike.

    i think a “bike guy”, might initially turn his nose up at the OE or no brand parts on a Rad or a Mycle, but its not supposed to be a nice bike. Its a pickup truck to use and abuse.
    The only thing i would caution is i think Rad use a proprietary wheel size, so if you do have an issue with a bent wheel, or a ripped tyre, you are beholden to Rad (as far as im aware).

    I dont know whether the frame has clearance to rebuild the fat 22″ onto a regular 24″ or 26″ Rim.

    I quite like the look of that Velosta. I would be happy to buy that, just bearing in mind i might be replacing some of the no name parts sooner than others.

    Probably not CE marked, but its not like they dont know how to Weld over in the far east. Frame will probably be fine. What would you do if the mid drive motor ate it? thats probably the biggest worry.

    stevious
    Full Member

    Do any of the GSD-likes have something like the clubhouse fort?

    Tern clubhouse fort

    We’re thinking of ditching a car completely but we’re up in Inverness so being able to keep the kids out of the worst of the weather is the most appealing thing about the GSD for me.

    HoratioHufnagel
    Free Member

    Not sure how those things would handle in a cross wind, but there’s similar things available for Radwagons and Yuba that might be adapted to fit. Some people have even bodged on those cheap mobility scooter rain covers.

    How can I protect my kiddos from rain, snow and sun?

    I think the front loading cargo bikes are better for keeping kids out of the rain.

    Ours just wear waterproofs, though it’s a nightmare getting them on our 5 year old who insists she doesn’t like the feel of them.

    Ewan
    Free Member

    https://velosta.co.uk/features%2Fspec <- if you’re in london you can get a test ride so it doesn’t seem like a scam. You can at least find out wtf is going on with that chain!

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    You can at least find out wtf is going on with that chain!

    It’ll be the same thing that used to go on with the mid 2000s Scott brochure mock ups.

    Used to be a game to spot the missing rotors and mixed up chains.

    The person doing it knew Photoshop but not bikes.nor cared.

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