All the mid drives I've seen come with goofy flared cranks. I fixed mine (for me) by substituting "square" unicycle cranks.
I like wide Q factor on my own bikes, and my feet tend to wander off to the outer ends of the pedals if the tread width is narrow. But Bafang mid drive is wide even for me.
If you don't mind me linking a different site about this topic:
Bicycle Q Factor Definition - Ebike Mid-Drive Motor Q Factor List
- Yamaha PW-X Q Factor Length: 168 mm
- Shimano E8000 Q Factor Length: 175 mm
- Brose Drive T, TF, S Q Factor Length: 179 mm
- Bosch Performance Line Q Factor Length: 180 mm
Considering that modern non-ebike q-factors are now usually 170-185mm (including boost),
the brand-name complete ebikes have a normal Q factor. It's generally only the DIY mid-drives that are out to 200mm q or more. And it's a bit puzzling for the DIY ones that they simply don't stretch out the motor mounts a couple more inches so that more traditional narrow-stanced pedals don't hit the back of the motor. I don't understand why the motor has to be so close to the bottom bracket. If people can put the motor in the triangle, they can certainly move it further up the down tube with longer motor mounts.
Eventually I will try again with a normal 181q crankset to do this with my mid-drive that has a q of around 200mm and is VERY offset to the right. What's holding me back is mainly the battery still being attached to the downtube, so no room to properly attach heavy-duty exhaust muffler brackets to hold the front of the motor in place. Have a battery bag now, waiting for more time in the Winter to try. Then try to use a generic tray (see below) and hopefully link everything up solid. I think I actually threw away the one tray I had because it didn't fit the carbon frame, DOH! Has to be used on aluminum or steel (or titanium) 68/73 frame and no extra room on either side of the bb
(tray in image is below the engine and to the left of the controller). If you can attach the BACK of a mid-drive motor to the very front of a tray like this, there is a decent chance the pedal cranks will miss the motor and it would be doable. It will be close and you'll need to offset the right pedal with spacer(s) to the right as much as you can, then offset the motor to the left as much as you can. Because with mine, the motor is offset to the right of the frame 15mm, and the q factor is 200 mm; you are shooting for around 180mm q total so the motor needs to be going to the left (centered) and the right pedal a bit to the right so that the chainline can actually work (regardless of 1 or 2 chains).