I put the bike thru another heavy cargo load, though only about 60lbs of dog food this time. Small bags in the baskets, one small bag on the rear rack on top of the pack, and the largest bag on the front baskets over the top of everything.
This time I had it balanced well enough, with enough of the weight lower on the bike to make it rideable at normal speeds on the road, though corners I still slowed way down for, so I woulnd't have to lean into them much, just in case.
The one recurring problem with this kind of load is bottoming out the front shock, and not having enough pressure to rise back up unless I standover the bike and pull the bars upward to lift against the cargo weight--very hard for me to do. But it happens at just about any 1" or greater bump or hole. I don't really have a fix for it, but then again I hadn't intended this bike to do this kind of work...just that like always, when I find a good deal on stuff I need, I have to take it and haul it with whatever I'm riding at the time, somehow.
Still, the Fusin motor and controller are doing a great job even like this. Only 25Wh/mile, even with that load at normal 20MPH cruising speeds and 15-16MPH average speeds. Controller gets pretty warm at slower to middling speeds with these loads in this heat (>100F after dusk), and the motor starts cool but gets fairly warm (more than bodyheat warm) by the end of the ride, and continued to warm up after I got home, till it was hot, but not uncomfortably so, about 10 minutes or so later.
I still want to make a tool to open the motor up, and see what it's like in there. I have had several ponderings on it; I mostly just need time to actually cut pieces and file them, weld them together, and test out the idea. Dunno if that will be any time soon.
I have another idea but it'd require someone to CNC something out of aluminum block or something. It'd be like a freewheel removal tool, with a nut on one end, hollow to fit over the axle, and the castellations on the other end to fit into the Fusin cover.
This time I had it balanced well enough, with enough of the weight lower on the bike to make it rideable at normal speeds on the road, though corners I still slowed way down for, so I woulnd't have to lean into them much, just in case.

The one recurring problem with this kind of load is bottoming out the front shock, and not having enough pressure to rise back up unless I standover the bike and pull the bars upward to lift against the cargo weight--very hard for me to do. But it happens at just about any 1" or greater bump or hole. I don't really have a fix for it, but then again I hadn't intended this bike to do this kind of work...just that like always, when I find a good deal on stuff I need, I have to take it and haul it with whatever I'm riding at the time, somehow.
Still, the Fusin motor and controller are doing a great job even like this. Only 25Wh/mile, even with that load at normal 20MPH cruising speeds and 15-16MPH average speeds. Controller gets pretty warm at slower to middling speeds with these loads in this heat (>100F after dusk), and the motor starts cool but gets fairly warm (more than bodyheat warm) by the end of the ride, and continued to warm up after I got home, till it was hot, but not uncomfortably so, about 10 minutes or so later.
I still want to make a tool to open the motor up, and see what it's like in there. I have had several ponderings on it; I mostly just need time to actually cut pieces and file them, weld them together, and test out the idea. Dunno if that will be any time soon.
I have another idea but it'd require someone to CNC something out of aluminum block or something. It'd be like a freewheel removal tool, with a nut on one end, hollow to fit over the axle, and the castellations on the other end to fit into the Fusin cover.