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Hello,
I'm new to ALL of this. I've never had an EV or worked a food delivery gig before and it'd be great to learn from anyone that has experience with EVs or delivering food with EVs. I've spent days learning as much as I can to make an informed decision, and am still uncertain about a lot. I can see the benefits to both and have flip flopped on the decision several times. I'll try my best to organize my thoughts so far.
Budget:
I'd need to keep the price of the EV at $1k or even less if possible. I need to have something left to buy a helmet, a delivery bag, and a new phone because the Dasher app isn't compatible with my current one.
Scooters:
Scooters seem to have a strong edge by being simple and more compact. I live in the suburbs of Philly. It's pretty spaced out over here, so I'm not even sure if my area is viable for ebike/scooter delivery. I may have to take a bus or an Uber to get to the city for work and having a scooter would make multi-modal transportation easier.
I also feel like their compact size and their perceived dorkiness would allow me to "get away" with more things. For instance, carrying the scooter into restaurants and grocery stores, or walking the scooter inside the lobby of businesses and apartments, or even squeezing into elevators when needed. Possibly even drawing less attetion from both LE and thieves alike.
Bikes:
So there seem to be tradeoffs between the 2 platforms, bike or scooter. While sooters seem to require less maintenance, finding someone to service an ebike would be much easier than finding someone to service an electric scooter. Having a bike would allow for carrying food on a rack-mounted delivery bag. Bikes also seem to allow for more flexibility with the size of the battery as well as the ability to easily swap a second battery pack if needed.
As a base, I already have a Trek FX that I could convert to an ebike. I was hoping to find a direct drive rear hub motor kit for it, but the bike does not seem like an ideal candidate due to its configuration. The bike is a flat-bar road bike with trigger shifters that are integrated with the brake levers. Since I don't have any ebike experience I decided based on vibes alone that I'd want at minimum a 1000W motor with a 48V controller and 30Ah+ battery. I couldn't find a kit with that power that has 700c wheels, and rims that can mount normal size road tires and are compatible with rim brakes. LMK if I've overlooked any kits that are compatible with my bike, or any potential workarounds.
Because I couldn't find that kind of kit and was having trouble sourcing all the necessary individual components, I then considered buying a pre-built ebike and that only brought on a whole new set of frustrations. I'm not interested in any of the ebikes that are shaped like motorcycles or dirt bikes. The bike must be bike shaped to avoid drawing too much unwanted attention. But those type of bike seem to be the only ones that come with a reasonably sized battery. I'm also not interested in fat bikes, folding bikes, dual suspension bikes, bikes with batteries that can't easily be replaced, or any other of the gimmicks out there. My ideal ebike would be a a simple rigid or hardtail mountain bike, and all of the "normal" ebikes that I can find are fitted with incredibly underwhelming battery capacities. I don't wanna sink all this money into an ebike AND still have to buy a battery.
Conclusion:
I'm terrible at conclusions, that's why I'm here. I guess let me know what your thoughts are, I'll take anything from generalized statements to specific recommendations because so far I'm working off of wild speculation and confusion.
It's a decision I don't have much time left to make, so maybe the simplest thing is the right thing? I'm looking an inexpensive scooter on Aliexpress. There's a few things left to be desired, but it's ~$630. It claims to have 2x1200W motors and a 23.4Ah battery, and it has an actual spring suspension. Would it be a good idea to get experience on something inexpensive like this to have more clarity for the second time around?
I'm new to ALL of this. I've never had an EV or worked a food delivery gig before and it'd be great to learn from anyone that has experience with EVs or delivering food with EVs. I've spent days learning as much as I can to make an informed decision, and am still uncertain about a lot. I can see the benefits to both and have flip flopped on the decision several times. I'll try my best to organize my thoughts so far.
Budget:
I'd need to keep the price of the EV at $1k or even less if possible. I need to have something left to buy a helmet, a delivery bag, and a new phone because the Dasher app isn't compatible with my current one.
Scooters:
Scooters seem to have a strong edge by being simple and more compact. I live in the suburbs of Philly. It's pretty spaced out over here, so I'm not even sure if my area is viable for ebike/scooter delivery. I may have to take a bus or an Uber to get to the city for work and having a scooter would make multi-modal transportation easier.
I also feel like their compact size and their perceived dorkiness would allow me to "get away" with more things. For instance, carrying the scooter into restaurants and grocery stores, or walking the scooter inside the lobby of businesses and apartments, or even squeezing into elevators when needed. Possibly even drawing less attetion from both LE and thieves alike.
Bikes:
So there seem to be tradeoffs between the 2 platforms, bike or scooter. While sooters seem to require less maintenance, finding someone to service an ebike would be much easier than finding someone to service an electric scooter. Having a bike would allow for carrying food on a rack-mounted delivery bag. Bikes also seem to allow for more flexibility with the size of the battery as well as the ability to easily swap a second battery pack if needed.
As a base, I already have a Trek FX that I could convert to an ebike. I was hoping to find a direct drive rear hub motor kit for it, but the bike does not seem like an ideal candidate due to its configuration. The bike is a flat-bar road bike with trigger shifters that are integrated with the brake levers. Since I don't have any ebike experience I decided based on vibes alone that I'd want at minimum a 1000W motor with a 48V controller and 30Ah+ battery. I couldn't find a kit with that power that has 700c wheels, and rims that can mount normal size road tires and are compatible with rim brakes. LMK if I've overlooked any kits that are compatible with my bike, or any potential workarounds.
Because I couldn't find that kind of kit and was having trouble sourcing all the necessary individual components, I then considered buying a pre-built ebike and that only brought on a whole new set of frustrations. I'm not interested in any of the ebikes that are shaped like motorcycles or dirt bikes. The bike must be bike shaped to avoid drawing too much unwanted attention. But those type of bike seem to be the only ones that come with a reasonably sized battery. I'm also not interested in fat bikes, folding bikes, dual suspension bikes, bikes with batteries that can't easily be replaced, or any other of the gimmicks out there. My ideal ebike would be a a simple rigid or hardtail mountain bike, and all of the "normal" ebikes that I can find are fitted with incredibly underwhelming battery capacities. I don't wanna sink all this money into an ebike AND still have to buy a battery.
Conclusion:
I'm terrible at conclusions, that's why I'm here. I guess let me know what your thoughts are, I'll take anything from generalized statements to specific recommendations because so far I'm working off of wild speculation and confusion.
It's a decision I don't have much time left to make, so maybe the simplest thing is the right thing? I'm looking an inexpensive scooter on Aliexpress. There's a few things left to be desired, but it's ~$630. It claims to have 2x1200W motors and a 23.4Ah battery, and it has an actual spring suspension. Would it be a good idea to get experience on something inexpensive like this to have more clarity for the second time around?