Haven't had one of those for a while, what's new with you and yer wheels, folks? Any questions for things?
I recently came back from a vaction in Berlin and like half the fun was seeing cool bicycles all the time and having an actual bike culture, with like, cool shops n shit. It owned super hard. Even got a show of Fixie Riders doing mad spins and tricks.
Any projects on your mind? After having seen so many of the old steelframe roadbikes, I kinda wanna get one, even with frame shifters, just as a second café racer. Also still looking for a cargo bike that doesn't break the bank, but the local used market is ... fairly nonexistant, sadly. I'll find one of these days.
DA GUIDE
Anyway I recently converted an old trekking bike into a sort of cargo bike (transportation bike?). And it fucking rules, man. Panniers are nice, but the convenience of always rolling around with 70L and 40KG of carrying capacity on your daily fucking owns. Oh look, a computer monitor I need for home office, into the crate it goes!
So what you want is a front rack that affixes to the frame, not the fork. Because then your bars don't drop to one side and bring the whole thing clattering down when you leave it. This is about 25€. And then you put a fitting crate on it, that's somewhere between free and 5€ or so. Make sure it has holes so the rain can drain.
For the rear, you want your standard rear rack and then put a bigger baseplate on it for BIG CRATE. In the old continent the M-Wave Racky Baseplate (sorry for the advertising) is probably your most convenient bed, for the rugged individualists elsewhere in the world I'm sure you can find or just make something similar to screw onto a standard rack. Maybe take the Racky as a guide, it's not like it's a complicated system.
And then you just ziptie on a big crate. I got a 46L one. Make sure you you have somewhere to put your lights if you're running clip on lights, as the seatpost is probably going to be hidden by it. I'd avise a step-through frame for ease of use, but being young I've had no problems kicking my leg over one on a step-over frame. As long as the crate isn't too far out to the side and lower than the saddle it's the same motion anyways, allthough it does sort of limit how high you can stack goods in the back.
Et voila. The front racks take about 10kg, your usual rear rack can take about 30kg and together you have about ~70L of storage space on your bike. It's not particularly aero, but some plastic crates also aren't going to be all that heavy and the baseplate / front rack probably add around 3kg. It's noticeable, but you know have a quasi cargo-bike!
How the hell do I go about looking for an ebike? There are too many options. I don’t want an electric motorcycle, I want a bike with an assisted pedal sometimes.
They are super fun, I love my old Trek.
Generally much cheaper to just upgrade a bike you already have, if you don't mind the wait you can get kits from aliexpress that work well for a little under $400
It's a tired out advice in bicycling circles but; local bike shop, if existent.
Should also probably ask where this is? E-Bike regulations in the US seem a lot different from europe as far as the law goes.
I'd pre-filter anything by removeable battery. There's by now services that will repack them for your with fresh ones even if the manufacturer doesn't produce replacements for them anymore, but the bill's going to get a lot higher when somebody has to disassemble the bike and dig into the frame, if that is even possible.
I purchased the radrunner from rad power bikes when they had their Christmas/end of year sale, it's awesome. It's designed as a utility bike, it has a heavy duty rear rack integrated into the frame, it can carry a lot, including a rear passenger and you can still go uphills on full throttle, so with pedal assist it is no problem. I attached a 70L pannier on the back, and along with a backpack I carry a lot of groceries. Lots of youtube videos.
https://www.radpowerbikes.com/products/radrunner-electric-utility-bike
I'm a fan of Smartmotion, which is an NZ company. Best value for money. Their bikes are just slightly road-illegal for Europe/Aus (300w+, Throttle to 30kmh) but you can request a downtune so the throttle is only a boost start to 6 kmh and the wattage is 250.
Or you can shake hands with danger as almost everyone in AU has juiced their bikes in order to make it safer on busy roads.