markz
100 TW
Figuring out proper gearing for my ebike for my preferred cadence
I have no clue what my riding speeds are but my 48-14 gearing seems to be close for my cadence (no clue but guessing its 65-70rpm) and cruising speed I like to ride, literally no clue on the actual speed I like to cruise at.
301 gear inches of development for 48-14 on a 700 x 45 wheel.
Switching to an 11-xx freewheel might do the trick with 383 gear inches.
An extra 82 development inches or 21.5% more (hopefully the math of 21.5% is right
)
I want to see what my cadence is when I am riding my ebike at various speeds so I can gear the bike properly. Which is why I found that cycle computer cadence measuring Instructable posted below.
Currently I have a front hub ebike (26x2.10) with a bicycle crank of 48/38/28 (square taper, welded/riveted gear set for entry level C$750 bike) and 700x45 rear wheel as mentioned.
Stock SunRace freewheel is 14-34, 7 speed (no mention of model in the specs)
14,16,18,21,24,28,34 or 14-16-18-21-24-28-34 depending on what format the calculator wants.
From what I see available, there are some 11-xx fw's available but at speed using the big crank gear and the small fw 11 gear will wear the chain out more and hence the gears. 7 and 8 spd chains are cheap but wearing the crank gears and rear gears it starts to add up. How long that will be I don't know. The dilemma is its a casual pedaling not like I am pushing hard, I just want to kind of trick myself into thinking I am working hard at pedaling. I don't really want to pedal faster which is the only antidote.
I dont know if its worth it to change up my gearing on the rear freewheel to an 11-xx, or go 13-xx and change the crank gears which means I need a new FD. The problem there is the current FD is rated for 48T large crank gear. Capacity is 20.
Shimano Tourney TY51 - https://bike.shimano.com/en-US/product/component/tourney/FD-TY510-TS3.html
I've read I can bend/add to the cage for it to shift out of range.
After riding the 11 gear small freewheel I will see how that extra 82 dev inches helps me out and go from there.
Then if I need to tweek it, look for a 50 or 52 crank and see what value FD are available for 7 or 8 speed stuff.
The 13 freewheel gains little 23 extra dev inches on 48 crank, but saves on wear and tear vs 11T freewheel small gear.
There is a cheap double 8 speed, square taper 52 crank so thats easy but then I need a new FD. Messing with the FD cage is an option.
Cruising speed for me is more important then hill climbing so I can go with a new 2x crank and keep small 2nd gear at 38 and still climb the hills I do frequently. I don't want to be mangling the FD, I've read you can bend it or add to it to shift out of range gears.
I havent tested the hills I dont normally ride, but the 38 middle gear seems to do well on the hills I regularly climb. The 28 I tried and its just to small but I feel as though the 28 would work well on the 2 or hills I always avoid, we're talking 20%+ grade and long which would be good to ride on days I want to really break a sweat hard core but never have done in the past. Times are changing, never used to pedal at all
Components
Rear Freewheels
https://www.modernbike.com/multi-speed-freewheels+page2+SortPriceAsc
13-34 - $31usd - Sunrace MF-M4S 7 Speed Freewheel, 13-34T, Chrome (48-13 = 324 development inches)
11-32 - $45usd - SunRace 9 speed 11-32t Freewheel (48-11 = 383 development inches)
11-34 - $60usd - Dimension 8-Speed 11-34t Nickel Plated Freewheel (Also come in 11-32, 11-30)
11-36 - $100usd - SunRace 10 speed 11-36t Freewheel
Cranksets
https://www.modernbike.com/cranksets+SortPriceAsc
I like this one as its cheap $23usd - Sunlite Steel Double 52/40x170 Crankset - https://www.modernbike.com/s?search=Sunlite+Steel+Double+52%2F40x170+Crankset
415 development inches
53-39 - https://www.modernbike.com/cranksets+crankset-ringsis53-39
$37usd - 8 speed - Sunlite Road Alloy Double Crankset 170x53/39 Black (53-11 is 423 development inches)
https://www.modernbike.com/s?search=Sunlite+Road+Alloy+Double+Crankset+170x53%2F39+Black
52-42-30
Out of stock $67 - Sunlite Alloy Triple Crankset, 170 x52/42/30 , Black
52/36 - https://www.modernbike.com/52-36-cranksets+SortPriceAsc
$100usd minimum
This is the pedal cadence calculator uses this format Stock 14,16,18,21,24,28,34
https://www.berkshiresports.org/bicycle-gear-ratio-comparison-calculator/
in development (the actually distance in inches one pedal revolution takes you in the selected gear)
+
https://www.instructables.com/Very-Easy-Cadence-Meter-For-Your-Bike-12/
Mine is a Cateye Velo 8 so reading the instructable got me confused to try to convert things around to my benefit.
The problem I ran into with the instructable itself is that I have a 4 bolt small crank and the Cateye Velo 8 wheel size digits could only go from (1-2) (0-9) (0-9), which meant I could not enter 5 magnets for 3333 or 4 magnets for 4166 as in the Instructable.
Quote "The tire circumference numbers used to set up the Schwinn computer are too big to enter on the Velo "
After reading the comments I set my wheel size to 166 with one magnet on the crank as per what user jzink0883 quoted/mentioned.
For a quick confirmation I used a timer on the cell phone then I wave the magnet the best I can every second, it works out pretty well, key is for my large fridge magnet (1-1/4") to be half on half off the sensor. I get anywhere between 5-7kph = 50rpm-70rpm so seems to work with a consistant 55-65rpm.
I will use a small neodymium magnet I will use super glued to the crank.
Will hook up tomorrow when its warmer out (+10C and sunny) so I can ride and test out what cadence like at various speeds with cell phone gps speed app taped to the handlebars.
The only modification that will need to be done is lengthening the wire, and gluing the neo magnet.
My previous method was simply counting (one one-thousand, two one-thousand) and pedaling I figure my lazy pedal cadence is 60-80rpm but I don't know what my riding speed is, thats where my cell phone will come in to measure that.
Edit
I like this website so much as its better to understand.
I feel as though I need an extra 6-10kph at a cadence of 70.
The cheap way to find out if I like that is to just buy the cheapest 11-xx rear fw.
Then if I want to plunge and go 13-xx rear fw, the 7/8 spd Microshift triple front derailleurs are cheap in 52 and 53. Middle crank would be 10 below, and small 10 below middle.
53/43/33 which is close to my 28 small I already have for the really steep long hills I literally always avoided in the past.
https://www.gear-calculator.com/
current setup - https://www.gear-calculator.com/?GR=DERS&KB=28,38,48&RZ=34,28,24,21,18,16,14&UF=2281&TF=70&SL=2.6&UN=KMH&DV=speed

I have no clue what my riding speeds are but my 48-14 gearing seems to be close for my cadence (no clue but guessing its 65-70rpm) and cruising speed I like to ride, literally no clue on the actual speed I like to cruise at.
301 gear inches of development for 48-14 on a 700 x 45 wheel.
Switching to an 11-xx freewheel might do the trick with 383 gear inches.
An extra 82 development inches or 21.5% more (hopefully the math of 21.5% is right

I want to see what my cadence is when I am riding my ebike at various speeds so I can gear the bike properly. Which is why I found that cycle computer cadence measuring Instructable posted below.
Currently I have a front hub ebike (26x2.10) with a bicycle crank of 48/38/28 (square taper, welded/riveted gear set for entry level C$750 bike) and 700x45 rear wheel as mentioned.
Stock SunRace freewheel is 14-34, 7 speed (no mention of model in the specs)
14,16,18,21,24,28,34 or 14-16-18-21-24-28-34 depending on what format the calculator wants.
From what I see available, there are some 11-xx fw's available but at speed using the big crank gear and the small fw 11 gear will wear the chain out more and hence the gears. 7 and 8 spd chains are cheap but wearing the crank gears and rear gears it starts to add up. How long that will be I don't know. The dilemma is its a casual pedaling not like I am pushing hard, I just want to kind of trick myself into thinking I am working hard at pedaling. I don't really want to pedal faster which is the only antidote.
I dont know if its worth it to change up my gearing on the rear freewheel to an 11-xx, or go 13-xx and change the crank gears which means I need a new FD. The problem there is the current FD is rated for 48T large crank gear. Capacity is 20.
Shimano Tourney TY51 - https://bike.shimano.com/en-US/product/component/tourney/FD-TY510-TS3.html
I've read I can bend/add to the cage for it to shift out of range.
After riding the 11 gear small freewheel I will see how that extra 82 dev inches helps me out and go from there.
Then if I need to tweek it, look for a 50 or 52 crank and see what value FD are available for 7 or 8 speed stuff.
The 13 freewheel gains little 23 extra dev inches on 48 crank, but saves on wear and tear vs 11T freewheel small gear.
There is a cheap double 8 speed, square taper 52 crank so thats easy but then I need a new FD. Messing with the FD cage is an option.
Cruising speed for me is more important then hill climbing so I can go with a new 2x crank and keep small 2nd gear at 38 and still climb the hills I do frequently. I don't want to be mangling the FD, I've read you can bend it or add to it to shift out of range gears.
I havent tested the hills I dont normally ride, but the 38 middle gear seems to do well on the hills I regularly climb. The 28 I tried and its just to small but I feel as though the 28 would work well on the 2 or hills I always avoid, we're talking 20%+ grade and long which would be good to ride on days I want to really break a sweat hard core but never have done in the past. Times are changing, never used to pedal at all

Components
Rear Freewheels
https://www.modernbike.com/multi-speed-freewheels+page2+SortPriceAsc
13-34 - $31usd - Sunrace MF-M4S 7 Speed Freewheel, 13-34T, Chrome (48-13 = 324 development inches)
11-32 - $45usd - SunRace 9 speed 11-32t Freewheel (48-11 = 383 development inches)
11-34 - $60usd - Dimension 8-Speed 11-34t Nickel Plated Freewheel (Also come in 11-32, 11-30)
11-36 - $100usd - SunRace 10 speed 11-36t Freewheel
Cranksets
https://www.modernbike.com/cranksets+SortPriceAsc
I like this one as its cheap $23usd - Sunlite Steel Double 52/40x170 Crankset - https://www.modernbike.com/s?search=Sunlite+Steel+Double+52%2F40x170+Crankset
415 development inches
53-39 - https://www.modernbike.com/cranksets+crankset-ringsis53-39
$37usd - 8 speed - Sunlite Road Alloy Double Crankset 170x53/39 Black (53-11 is 423 development inches)
https://www.modernbike.com/s?search=Sunlite+Road+Alloy+Double+Crankset+170x53%2F39+Black
52-42-30
Out of stock $67 - Sunlite Alloy Triple Crankset, 170 x52/42/30 , Black
52/36 - https://www.modernbike.com/52-36-cranksets+SortPriceAsc
$100usd minimum
This is the pedal cadence calculator uses this format Stock 14,16,18,21,24,28,34
https://www.berkshiresports.org/bicycle-gear-ratio-comparison-calculator/
in development (the actually distance in inches one pedal revolution takes you in the selected gear)
+
https://www.instructables.com/Very-Easy-Cadence-Meter-For-Your-Bike-12/
Mine is a Cateye Velo 8 so reading the instructable got me confused to try to convert things around to my benefit.
The problem I ran into with the instructable itself is that I have a 4 bolt small crank and the Cateye Velo 8 wheel size digits could only go from (1-2) (0-9) (0-9), which meant I could not enter 5 magnets for 3333 or 4 magnets for 4166 as in the Instructable.
Quote "The tire circumference numbers used to set up the Schwinn computer are too big to enter on the Velo "
After reading the comments I set my wheel size to 166 with one magnet on the crank as per what user jzink0883 quoted/mentioned.
For a quick confirmation I used a timer on the cell phone then I wave the magnet the best I can every second, it works out pretty well, key is for my large fridge magnet (1-1/4") to be half on half off the sensor. I get anywhere between 5-7kph = 50rpm-70rpm so seems to work with a consistant 55-65rpm.
I will use a small neodymium magnet I will use super glued to the crank.
Will hook up tomorrow when its warmer out (+10C and sunny) so I can ride and test out what cadence like at various speeds with cell phone gps speed app taped to the handlebars.
The only modification that will need to be done is lengthening the wire, and gluing the neo magnet.
My previous method was simply counting (one one-thousand, two one-thousand) and pedaling I figure my lazy pedal cadence is 60-80rpm but I don't know what my riding speed is, thats where my cell phone will come in to measure that.
Edit
I like this website so much as its better to understand.
I feel as though I need an extra 6-10kph at a cadence of 70.
The cheap way to find out if I like that is to just buy the cheapest 11-xx rear fw.
Then if I want to plunge and go 13-xx rear fw, the 7/8 spd Microshift triple front derailleurs are cheap in 52 and 53. Middle crank would be 10 below, and small 10 below middle.
53/43/33 which is close to my 28 small I already have for the really steep long hills I literally always avoided in the past.
https://www.gear-calculator.com/
current setup - https://www.gear-calculator.com/?GR=DERS&KB=28,38,48&RZ=34,28,24,21,18,16,14&UF=2281&TF=70&SL=2.6&UN=KMH&DV=speed
