First off, thank you all so much for all the advice. I sincerely appreciate it!
I want to dig into some of your comments. Please don't take this as combative or argumentative. I am just trying to learn by digging deeper!
LewTwo said:
d8veh said:
Normally, I'd recommend the BBS02 because it has more power for very little weight disadvantage. I hate to have to say it, but that's just the wrong bike for converting. All that technical excellence would be wasted as much of it starts to become a disadvantage as soon as you add a motor. Take my advice and get a more suitable donor.
I have to agree. The pictures the OP posted show a beautiful machine.
It would almost be a crime to mess with it and it is not really a good base for conversion to an e-bike.
Why is taking an elegant, fun, lightweight, and extremely comfortable bike and adding a motor to it such a bad thing? I have this bike tuned in to exactly the right geometry for my body and it is so very comfortable, you wouldn't even believe. Every time I ride a different bike, I'm reminded of just how many hours I've spent on a bike fitting machine testing saddles, grips, cranks, and stems to get everything just
perfect.
LewTwo said:
hub motor problems:
... 20 spoke wheels
These are Mavic Ksyrium Wheels. I would have never cut the spokes and reuse the rims. They are worth too much in resale value as a complete set. So if I go hub motor, I'm going to have to build a new wheel from scratch. And don't let the low spoke count fool you. These wheels are
tough. I ride onto and off of curbs, potholes, manholes, and those crazy metal plates they use to cover big holes in the road every day. I bunnyhop over them when I can, but sometimes it comes at you too fast when darting around a car or something.
LewTwo said:
... hard to tell from the picture but would either set of drop out accept a slide in axle
What do you mean? Do you mean slide-in drop outs? They have to be slide in to accomodate the belt, so a bolt on slide in axle should work if I'm understanding you correctly.
LewTwo said:
... toquer arms might be a challenge as well
No clue about how hard that will be. I could ask the bike shop when I take it there, although I gotta be honest, I'm leaning more towards mid-drive.
LewTwo said:
mid drive problems:
... single speed
... gates belt
I don't know if you can tell from my pictures, but the rear wheel has Shimano 11sp cassette spline. The gates sprocket is aligned with spacers. I can move it in and out wherever is necessary to accomodate the front chainring's offset. What's more, the CDX Centertrack Gates belt is
much less sensitive to flawless chainline alignment than the previous models.
LewTwo said:
ride comfort problems:
(with an e-bike your average speed is going to increase and so will the roughness of the ride - your back will notice)
You're probably right. I rented a Trek XM700+ (Bosch Drive 28mph) for a day and rode it 40 miles and an average speed of 26mph. Things come at you faster and they hit harder. It had a 35mm front suspension and it was bottoming out a lot. I thought the bike was going to fall apart and then I realized that god awful sound was chainslap. Riding a gates carbon belt for years you forget how many horrible sounds a chain makes.
LewTwo said:
... 17mm rims and 25mm high pressure tires are going to make for a rough rides at higher speeds
I can get bigger tires. I actually tried some 32mm tires once running 70psi but they weren't any more comfortable and I got several flats after riding years with no flats. So I went back to the 25s and no issues since.
LewTwo said:
... no shock absorption in the current frame, seat post or fork
Isn't that what your arms and legs are for? If a big bump comes, you use your body as a spring, otherwise the little stuff is fine. When I raced XC, I would use a rigid bike (mind you at the time full suspension was heavy and worthless and front suspension would stiffen up badly at low temperatures so rigid had a huge weight advantage with very little disadvantage. I used to kill the competition because it also just makes you much better at bike control.
LewTwo said:
... lowering the seat for a less aggressive posture will leave little room for a good suspension seat post
... suspension seats are one 'size fits all' (worst case scenario is a 350 pound rider ... do the math for 150 pound rider)
I would be hesitant to change my geometry at all. And although it may not look it, my seat is actually
very comfortable. The most important thing in seat comfort is not cushioning. Think of sitting on a hard coffee table. Now imagine adding a soft pillow and sitting on that. It feels better at first, but before long, your sit bones press through the squishy material and you're right back where you started. What's far more important than squishy is springy and a shape that matches your sit bones precisely. My saddle is thin and flat with long seat rails so it works like a spring to absorb the bigger hits, but fits my sit bones perfectly and therefore doesn't need foam or gel. It's kind of like a leather saddle with a built in spring, just
much, much lighter.
LewTwo said:
Look for a new donor bike. Consider:
... Aluminum frame (for the obvious weight reason)
Aluminum frames beat the crap out of me. I much prefer steel and carbon.
LewTwo said:
... Avoid suspension frames or forks (for the obvious weight reasons)
But isn't that what's
wrong with my bike? The fact it doesn't have suspension?
LewTwo said:
... Consider smaller wheels 26, 24, even 20 inch (less tire, tube, wheel and shorter spokes = less weight)
Don't smaller wheels ride rougher? I once had a recumbent with 20" in the front and 24" in the rear and it beat the hell out of me.
LewTwo said:
... Under 20-25mph rim brakes work well and they weight less
I have rim brakes now. They work great when it's dry. But when it's wet...

If I were going to start from scratch, I would want hydraulic disc brakes.
LewTwo said:
... Be sure you have enough room for a good suspension seat post like the Thunderbuster (and fit the correct elastomer)
I've heard nothing but good things about the Thudbuster. I could see adding that to a hardtail to create a kind of dual-suspension bike that weighs less. But per your comment above, I wouldn't have a front suspension fork. Do you ride a setup like this? With "rear suspension" and no front suspension? Maybe because on an electric bike you're suggesting I would ride more like a Harley where the weight is on my butt not my hands, a front suspension is wasted? If that's the case, wouldn't the aggressive geometry of a mountain bike be the wrong donor? Wouldn't a cruiser be a better donor for that?
LewTwo said:
... Pay attention to the tires. For urban riding avoid knobbies and steel bead wires (for the obvious weight reasons)
Do you have a favorite brand/model? Something supple, light, and resistant to flats?
LewTwo said:
... Have the battery mounted in the bottom of the triangle to keep the center of gravity low ... easier to lift and/or carry.
Makes sense. Thank you!
LewTwo said:
I hesitate to say anything regarding the motor because for your parameters it is mainly personal opinion and opinions are like ...
I can't tell you how much I appreciate a complete stranger taking the time to put so much effort into sharing your opinions with me.
So thank you and please don't hold back!
LewTwo said:
Personally I think I would go for the mid drive at about 500 peak watts and a 3 speed IGH (internally geared hub) ...
Once I realized the mid drive can spin faster than I can pedal, what's wrong with having a single speed? I know I'd need a lower gear for steep hills (but I don't have any) and the higher gears for higher speeds (but it'll speed limited to 20mph anyway won't it? Since it has the "throttle" those are limited to 20mph, right?). Why add the weight of an IGH?
LewTwo said:
Although many people berate them: front hub motors are simple and there are an awful lot of e-bikes made in that configuration.
I'm guessing my dainty carbon fork is a poor candidate for this. However, if I went with a new steel fork (or even suspension fork) with a disc brake mount, then I could potentially solve a lot of problems at once: stronger fork, front suspension, disc brake, motor. Thoughts?
If I were going to start from scratch with a new donor bike, my first thought would be an endurance frame carbon road bike that has some sort of compliant frame (like Trek Domane or Specialized Roubaix) and hydraulic disc brakes out of the box. This way I could have a comfy geometry, comfy low travel "suspension" AND 18lb/8.2kg starting weight.
Thoughts?