Questions that I have about generally everything

I wonder what the profile of the bike thief is, knowing that can help a person understand how to keep stuff safe.

I would bet the drug users, do not have much at their disposal for stealing things. Any tools of value they would have hocked for drugs or booze. Also, their buddies would have no problem stealing their tools to hock for their drug habit. And by their nature, they are just too messed up most of the time to be really good at stealing things that are locked up.

I'm thinking the real threat is the people that are just naturally thieves. That's how they learned to supply themselves with what they want. They are probably always on the lookout for a quick easy buck. I have always though if you are so unlucky as to have one as a neighbor or they live within a few blocks of one, you have a much greater chance of getting ripped off. They will notice the good stealable stuff in the neighbor hood and come out at night to get it. They will have learned what tools work best for stealing different things. They will know a old beat up pair of bolt cutters are going to have a hard time cutting through a lock, chain or cable.

Deron.
 
Cable is the easiest for thieves, all they need is tiny little snips, literally toenail clippers, and a bic lighter. After they toast the cable a bit, it snips easy a strand at a time. All they need is unobserved time and balls. This won't happen at the store, in front of the front door security camera, etc. Wall mart is great since the garden section has an actual guy that guards the garden section. Parking it there a few feet from him ought to help. At night, at home, dogs are the way for sure. I haven't locked the back door in 30 years. For 18 of those years my next door neighbors were drug dealers, pedophiles, and once a murderess. All my table saws and other shop tools sat in the backyard with a tarp to keep off the rain, and NOBODY ever even touched them. No way were they coming in my yard even if I'd left piles of cash in plain sight. It takes about 4 dogs to get this effect. That pack attack is too scary to contemplate.
 
I am a dog whisperer. Two of my pack are euthanasia rescues. Come into my yard with bad energy and your ass is toast. I was doing more rescues a coulple years ago, but now I just have a pack of unadoptable dogs. The mean ones do accumulate. 90% can be turned around in two weeks, but the 10% ers are just like human 10% ers. They'll kill if they get a chance. Even Cezar has a few he won't show on TV in the far back cages. One of my mean ones ate another dog. The other one will just attack people. The doors to the house and gates to the yard are like prison, two sets to get through to get out.
 
My pack all walks together, but mostly I take em to the desert to chase rabbits. One of Cezars truly unfixable ones is one of the Rottwilers that killed a lady in the famous case from San Francisco. Only Cezar enters that cage. I think he had a german shepherd years ago that was similar. Cezars pack could fix my mean dogs, but my pack is not as balanced. With only half my dogs naturally balanced, I have days the pack is balanced and days it's not. My big handicap as a dog whisperer is having to leave to go to work everyday. Cezar is either there, or his employees are, 24-7. Once I leave the house, the pack goes to it's natural state, which could go either way. Once I return, I tip the pack back to calm submissive. As a smaller rehabilitator, the problem is that you easily find homes for nice dogs, and get stuck with the mean ones. Specializing in a huge breed like bloodhounds makes it even harder to unload a mean one. Anybody want a great guard dog? It may only bite you hard enough to draw blood occasionally. :shock: Just kidding of course, almost nobody is qualified to adopt these dogs.
 
one of the basic questions i think was not answered fully: e-bikes are more popular among young men in canada because automobile insurance is MUCH more expensive there than in the US.

of course '42' is the correct answer to all the other questions...
 
anyone know how much cheaper it is over 1 yr to operate SLA's rather than buying gas?

For example, forget about the cost of buying an ebike but factor in how much it cost to replace SLA batteries over buying gas. I'd like to see just how much cheaper it would be. Include pedaling into the equation too since most of us probably pedal some.
 
here's what our ex-pat ex-pert on PbXx has ex-perienced.
no pedals, but should give u a baseline reference for starters.

safe said:
Argh... I'm getting tired of replacing SLA batteries every year. :roll:

My first set was three 12V 36Ah wheelchair batteries for only $135... now I'm looking to have to replace the 18Ah cells for $40 a piece... that's 6*$40 = $240, so proportionally that's 177% above my original price. So SLA's are getting more and more expensive... :shock:


My first set of batteries lasted for about 3000-4000 miles... but they were the bigger size and I used them at around 1C all the time.

This second group of cells (six 18Ah cells spread out over the last 2000+ miles) comes to the same total of lead, but the way I used them didn't get quite the same mileage. Close.. but a little less.
 
morph999 said:
anyone know how much cheaper it is over 1 yr to operate SLA's rather than buying gas?

For example, forget about the cost of buying an ebike but factor in how much it cost to replace SLA batteries over buying gas. I'd like to see just how much cheaper it would be. Include pedaling into the equation too since most of us probably pedal some.

to make any sensible comparison one must compare apples to apples. are you comparing the cost of an e-bike battery to the cost of the gas to run a moped? if so i am sure the moped will win at 100 mpg. if you try to compare the cost of ebike batteries to the cost of driving a car it is totally unfair. If you compare the lead acid battery cost to run a small car with the gas cost the gas will be way ahead still. the gain is made by making the decision to ride a bike rather than ride in a huge steel box.
 
bobmcree said:
morph999 said:
anyone know how much cheaper it is over 1 yr to operate SLA's rather than buying gas?

For example, forget about the cost of buying an ebike but factor in how much it cost to replace SLA batteries over buying gas. I'd like to see just how much cheaper it would be. Include pedaling into the equation too since most of us probably pedal some.

to make any sensible comparison one must compare apples to apples. are you comparing the cost of an e-bike battery to the cost of the gas to run a moped? if so i am sure the moped will win at 100 mpg. if you try to compare the cost of ebike batteries to the cost of driving a car it is totally unfair. If you compare the lead acid battery cost to run a small car with the gas cost the gas will be way ahead still. the gain is made by making the decision to ride a bike rather than ride in a huge steel box.

you are saying that it's cheaper to drive a car than ride an ebike?
 
morph999 said:
you are saying that it's cheaper to drive a car than ride an ebike?

that is not what i am saying at all. you asked about the cost of lead acid power vs. the cost of gasoline power, right? What I said was that you need then to compare the gas used by a moped to the lead acid used by an ebike, or you need to compare the lead acid cost of running a car to the cost of running a car on gas. If you do this, and use the current $2 a gallon for the price of fuel, I said that gas will win in both cases.

You cannot compare the cost of the lead acid batteries used to run an ebike with the cost of the gasoline required to ride around in thousands of pounds of automobile. You must factor in many other costs as well if you are going to try to put a relative cost on the two means of travel, and you must factor in the difference between riding on an ebike and riding in an automobile.

If you want to make a strict apples to apples comparison, let's say your ebike batteries cost $120 for 3 quality 12 Ah SLA batteries, and let's be very generous and give you 300 cycles of discharge to 8Ah. You will not likely get any more than that, and most people will likely agree you will get less. So assuming the only cost of running the bike is the battery and you get your electricity for free, let's say that you are quite frugal with the motor power, and you only use 20 Wh per mile. I use much more, many use much less. Your battery is providing 8Ah x 300 cycles = 2400Ah @ 36v or 86,400Wh which will take you 86,400/20 or about 4,000 miles.

Let's be equally generous to the moped, and say it gets 100 mpg. It will then take you 40 gallons of gas costing $80 to travel the same distance that you traveled on $120 worth of batteries. The break-even point in this scenario is $3 a gallon for gas. This of course completely ignores the damage to the environment from burning the gas or refining it, or the cost of oil, filters, etc needed for the moped, which adds the real value to the ebike side of the equation.

Now let's look at an electric car run on lead acid vs. a gas powered car. Let's be equally generous with the batteries and just scale the numbers. Let's be extremely simplistic and just for the sake of illustration multiply by 10, say you have 10x the batteries and the car weighs 10x as much as the ebike and takes 10x the power to get you around. Again this is very simplistic but I think it is still a useful illustration. It now costs you $1200 for your batteries and they take you only about the same number of miles because the car is so much heavier than the ebike, especially using lead acid batteries. Your little gas powered car can be tiny and light like the electric one, so let's say it gets 40 mpg. The car will take 100 gallons of gas to go 4000 miles, costing $200. Your batteries cost you $1200 to go the same 4000 miles. Gas now has to cost $12 a gallon to break even. These numbers are terribly inaccurate, but they are not off by a factor of 10. The small gas powered car will probably get >50mpg and the electric car will probably use a lot more than 200Wh/mile, electricity is NOT free, etc. so the errors add up in favor of the gas operated vehicle having the lowest fuel cost if one only compares the battery and gasoline costs.

The bottom line is that if you only look at battery cost vs. gasoline cost, you will never run a vehicle on lead acid batteries for less than the cost of running the same sized vehicle on gas unless gas costs much more than we have ever paid, or you get your batteries some other way than buying them retail. Lead acid is not the way to go unless you just need the cheapest thing that will work. The cycle life is terrible, the Peukert effect means you cannot get much of the capacity out of the battery at EV currents, they are heavy, etc. The real benefit comes when you compare running the smallest suitable vehicle to the cost of running a full-sized automobile. In our example, the ebike travels for a cost of about 3 cents a mile, and the electric car travels for about 10x the cost. The moped costs less for gas than running the ebike, but one must consider the other costs including the cost to the environment. Unfortunately one must also consider the cost to the environment of millions of lead acid batteries sitting in landfills leaching lead into the ground water.

Lead acid batteries are the cheapest in terms of initial outlay, but they are no longer a good investment now that there are lithium based batteries available that can provide much more power and much longer cycle life with lower weight. Riding an ebike powered by lead acid batteries still has a lower impact on the earth by far than driving in a gas powered car. Duh...
 
Thanks. I didn't know that. I was of the idea that electric bikes were the cheapest way to go over the long run. I guess I never thought to really compute it. I guess they are only cheapest if we can get some cheap lithium phosphate batteries. I don't really care about the environment all that much. I chose electric bikes because I like riding my bike and I'm older and also I wanted to stop driving my car. I think those scooters/mopeds look feminine.
 
morph999 said:
Thanks. I didn't know that. I was of the idea that electric bikes were the cheapest way to go over the long run. I guess I never thought to really compute it. I guess they are only cheapest if we can get some cheap lithium phosphate batteries. I don't really care about the environment all that much. I chose electric bikes because I like riding my bike and I'm older and also I wanted to stop driving my car. I think those scooters/mopeds look feminine.

i know you really do care about the environment, but i understand it cannot be the top priority for folks like us who have limited funds. There are some kits for as little as $125 to add a smoke-belching 2-stroke weedeater type engine to a bike, and if your top priority is cheap transportation on a powered bike that will be the cheapest way to go until gas goes up a lot more. It is easy for someone to say you are a problem for the environment because they don't like your little gas powered bike, but it still uses a lot less resources than a car and if you are doing it instead the environment is way ahead.

i really want to build my ebike into a hybrid that burns vegetable oil to charge the batteries, but there just are no little diesels around that will run on french fry oil.

if you want a quantum leap up in gas bicycle power kits check out staton-inc.com. he has kits using the small honda and subaru 4 stroke engines. there is a fairly recent newsgroup where people who want to use gas power on their bikes are a little more at home than this one, and there is a recent post on a very cheap gas bike conversion. it needs a lot of tinkering to get it right, it is at

http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/motorassistbicycles/?yguid=271554466

http://www.handhelditems.com/certified- ... 18865.html

you can get a complete ebike setup for about $350 including cheap lead acid batteries that will last 1/3 as long as the ones in my example. once you do that you will be hooked, and cheaper batteries are coming, and gas powered bikes are illegal in most states if you care about that sort of thing...
 
Hmmm... what about making that comparison with LiFePO4 (ping) which gets 3000+ cycles? Though I'm not sure what evidence we have as two how long a LiFePO4 batt lasts. They may last much longer than 3000 cycles which is supposed to take them down to 70% capacity. The SLAs go down to ~60%? or dead? after 300cycles.
 
The Stig said:
Hmmm... what about making that comparison with LiFePO4 (ping) which gets 3000+ cycles? Though I'm not sure what evidence we have as two how long a LiFePO4 batt lasts. They may last much longer than 3000 cycles which is supposed to take them down to 70% capacity. The SLAs go down to ~60%? or dead? after 300cycles.

take the same numbers, but figure the battery costs about 5x as much and lasts 10x as long, so you are 2x better off, then figure you can get about 50% deeper discharge depth, and the ebike becomes competitive with the gas powered moped even with $2 gas. applying the same numbers to the electric car, you cannot possibly break even with $2 gas unless you get your batteries in china from someone who is breaking all kinds of international laws regarding patents and intellectual property, and bring them over in your own boat.
 
anyone know if there is a way to open a dead SLA battery and revive it somehow? I guess the question is what makes an SLA battery dead? Can you change the solution inside it with new solution somehow?
 
I'm noticing that people are giving me that "are you kidding me?" look now that I'm using bike so confidently. I can't wait to get my 5303 motor. People are like, "are you kidding me, you are going to take the whole lane with that bike?". hahahaha. I sat through a red light as I was making a left turn and I felt kind of weird myself.
 
I always take the lane at a light for a left turn regardless of what type of bike I'm riding. I also take the lane for any left turn as long as traffic isn't too heavy or moving too fast. While motorists are accustomed to slowing and stopping for other vehicles making a left turn they don't always do so for a bicyclist which they (wrongly) assume shouldn't be on the road in the first place.

-R
 
I just ordered these tires for my bike
http://www.amazon.com/Kenda-Kross-Plus-Front-Slick/dp/B000ALEJF6/ref=pd_rhf_p_t_1

let me know what you think. I already ordered them so I can't really change it.

I ordered some mirrors. One for each side of my handlebars. and the Onguard 5018 bike chain.
 
these guys give them a 4.5 /5 . I think my current tires are only aired up to 35 psi so these 65 psi should kick ass.
http://www.totalbike.com/reviews/B000ALEJF6/Tires/
 
Back to trasnport costs. This only applies in my state, since car licenceing can be much more expensive elsewhere, and also the figures are kinda vague since it can be hard to pedict all costs, such as repairs over many years. But theoretically I calculate ALL costs, purchase, gas, licencing, repairs, tires, etc as follows. This was calculated back when gas was at $4.00 so the truck and car costs may be about a nickel cheaper now. Suprisingly even at 4 buck gas, the gas cost was only about 25% of the cost of driving a car. Anything that lets you put less miles on the car saves a bundle.


Bus , could be less or more, since fare is not based on distance $.05

Ebike with inexpensive lifepo4 battery such as ping $.07

Small motorcycle such as 100-150 cc $.13

Small used car, 4 cylinder $.25

Large used truck $.50

In large round numbers, I figured a drive to work and back in my car was costing me 15 bucks, and riding the bike about 3. But, I like to think of the savings as more, since I can defer paying for car repairs and replacement further in the future, so in a way I save 12 bucks today, and also won't have to pony up for a new car for longer. Hard to put an actual dollar value on that, but the difference, actually driving a car that has no loan on it, is priceless.

To be honest, due to several burned up motors, controllers, chargers, many purchases to aquire a bike parts supply, the learning curve was steep for me. So I may have spent enough to be costing a lot more than 7 cents a mile. Most of my problems were due either to stupidity, frying chargers, or just that I want to push a motor too hard to climb the hill from work to home in hot weather. Beliveing the ads from some ebike stuff vendors was part of the problem.

However, replacing my hot air balloon hobby with ebike hobby sure has been cheaper! Another year of frugal living, and I may be able to get the balloon out and fly it again, but now, I'm paying off 7 years of flying at about $10,000 a year in cost.
 
anyone know how long my CSB gel batteries can sit without being used and still be ok? I haven't used them in about 9 days. I probably won't be using them for another 7 days because I'm still having to rest my shoulder and rehab it.
 
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