When I bought this bicycle, I accepted that the BBSHD might not fit rotated up into the triangle, and I might be forced to buy a completely different bike, or...I might have to make significant modifications to this frame.
I am a fan of the Electra Townie/Trek Pure/Manhattan Smoothie as a street commuter. They have a "feet forward" posture that is very comfortable, although less aerodynamic. I regularly ride up to 30-MPH (48 km/h), and I feel reasonably safe at that speed.
I did grind some of the housing fins off of the BBSHD in order to get it fit where I wanted, and I also cut a chunk out of my seat-tube. I don't recommend this to anyone, and another poster here (calfee20) used a pipe and clamps to put a dimple in the frame tubes. That would be a more desirable solution.
http://electricbike.com/forum/forum/...=7342#post7342
The "Lux" variation of the Electra Townie is slightly longer behind the seat-tube. A base-model Townie is around $400, and if you want the single-speed Lux, its around $500. I wanted the dual-disc brakes, so I had to buy the "fat" version, which is $700. It has a 100mm bottom bracket width, and a 1-inch head-tube (standard Electra is 68mm BB and 1-1/8th head-tube). Since I mounted the battery bag "upside down", I have to lay the bike on its side to unzip so I can pull out the connector for charging the battery.
Stock rims are 100mm wide, and stock tires have a smooth street tread that is 26" X 3.5-inch wide. Total actual tire diameter is 28-inches.
So far I have added:
Suntour NCX suspension seat-post (I cut one inch off of the seat-tube due to the added height of the NCX springing mechanism).
quick-disconnect front axle nuts. When combined with the disc brake, the front wheel can be off in seconds for loading onto car rack
CLICK ON PICS TO ENLARGE
I am a fan of the Electra Townie/Trek Pure/Manhattan Smoothie as a street commuter. They have a "feet forward" posture that is very comfortable, although less aerodynamic. I regularly ride up to 30-MPH (48 km/h), and I feel reasonably safe at that speed.
I did grind some of the housing fins off of the BBSHD in order to get it fit where I wanted, and I also cut a chunk out of my seat-tube. I don't recommend this to anyone, and another poster here (calfee20) used a pipe and clamps to put a dimple in the frame tubes. That would be a more desirable solution.
http://electricbike.com/forum/forum/...=7342#post7342
The "Lux" variation of the Electra Townie is slightly longer behind the seat-tube. A base-model Townie is around $400, and if you want the single-speed Lux, its around $500. I wanted the dual-disc brakes, so I had to buy the "fat" version, which is $700. It has a 100mm bottom bracket width, and a 1-inch head-tube (standard Electra is 68mm BB and 1-1/8th head-tube). Since I mounted the battery bag "upside down", I have to lay the bike on its side to unzip so I can pull out the connector for charging the battery.
Stock rims are 100mm wide, and stock tires have a smooth street tread that is 26" X 3.5-inch wide. Total actual tire diameter is 28-inches.
So far I have added:
Suntour NCX suspension seat-post (I cut one inch off of the seat-tube due to the added height of the NCX springing mechanism).
quick-disconnect front axle nuts. When combined with the disc brake, the front wheel can be off in seconds for loading onto car rack
CLICK ON PICS TO ENLARGE
Comment