samoloh
10 W
hey Offroader, do you have a rough estimate on how much u spent on your build. I would like something very similar but currently lack the income as I am a student. But I am counting on getting a good summer job next
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Uschi K. said:
Offroader said:It was rainy out so I stuck to concrete today, no off-road driving.
Anyway, was having a ball practicing stairs at a local park, something I would never do on my other bike. Anyway I thought I heard a crack when climbing some, checked but didn't see anything broke. I continued for a little bit more.
Then I thought the bike felt a little unstable or wobbly while riding. The rear tire seemed to have some play in when pushing it side to side, and figured maybe a loose bolt, or maybe I broke the axle in the cromotor or loosened it, or possibly the dropout bearing bolt was loose or broke.
I drove home and was looking more closely, the bolts were all tight, axle bolts were tight.. shit must be the cromotor. Then I noticed a broken spoke, then I noticed a lot more broken spokes. Looks like I broke 6 spokes on the bike. All broken right at the elbow.
Well that sucks, but at least it wasn't the cromotor or something else I broke.
With this wheel build I used 13 gauge spokes to make it easy to tension and true. I did notice that after my first ride I had a couple of loose spokes. I wonder if the 13 gauge are strong enough or if I just never tensioned them enough. The big question is should I reuse 13 gauge spokes if I plan to climb stairs and beat on the bike or should I go with 11/12 gauage spokes?
moonshine said:agreed, i believe JRH used 10ga spokes for my cromo build. They're ridiculously stiff.
Rick, i know you're upgrading your bomber, any chance you're upgrading fenders and a kickstand???
E-Fuel said:Has anyone considered installing a mid-drive in this frame?
samoloh said:Is there a specific reason why almost everyone who has built a raptor so far is used a cromotor and no a different motor for their builds??
Rix said:samoloh said:Is there a specific reason why almost everyone who has built a raptor so far is used a cromotor and no a different motor for their builds??
Not saying this is the case, but from my point of view, the Raptor frame weighs around 23Ibs (10.5KG) empty. Building a really light ebike with a geared hub motor or a smaller direct drive doesn't make as much sence to me as going with the bigger cromotors or a Crystatlyte 54XX. I have been told by some of the Raptor owners that this bike can be pedaled with no power for some distance (varies by gear combos), albeit with knee clearance issues, but that's not what they bought the frame for. Ghost pedaling this bike and taking it easy with power assist will conceal it well on bike paths, school zones, around peds in the mall parking lot, situations like that. Then when no one is looking, let er rip!!![]()
Still the neat thing about the Raptor, the builder can do what ever the builder wants to do.
Rick
90lbs?samoloh said:If I get one, I'll want a build that's a bit lighter like 90lbs but the cromotor and frame already weight in at 20.7kg(~45lbs) and battery probably another 10kg(22lbs). I guess could probably achieve a highpower 90lbs build
GCinDC said:90lbs?samoloh said:If I get one, I'll want a build that's a bit lighter like 90lbs but the cromotor and frame already weight in at 20.7kg(~45lbs) and battery probably another 10kg(22lbs). I guess could probably achieve a highpower 90lbs build
here's a raptor + cromo w/ 26" wheels (large marge rear):
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moonshine, you gotta be closer to 145lbs with MC wheels, no?
145lbs is still VERY light for a MOTORCYCLE with pedals......![]()
samoloh said:Is there a specific reason why almost everyone who has built a raptor so far is used a cromotor and no a different motor for their builds??
samoloh said:Rix said:samoloh said:Is there a specific reason why almost everyone who has built a raptor so far is used a cromotor and no a different motor for their builds??
Not saying this is the case, but from my point of view, the Raptor frame weighs around 23Ibs (10.5KG) empty. Building a really light ebike with a geared hub motor or a smaller direct drive doesn't make as much sence to me as going with the bigger cromotors or a Crystatlyte 54XX. I have been told by some of the Raptor owners that this bike can be pedaled with no power for some distance (varies by gear combos), albeit with knee clearance issues, but that's not what they bought the frame for. Ghost pedaling this bike and taking it easy with power assist will conceal it well on bike paths, school zones, around peds in the mall parking lot, situations like that. Then when no one is looking, let er rip!!![]()
Still the neat thing about the Raptor, the builder can do what ever the builder wants to do.
Rick
I'll definitely want to let her rip. If I get one, I'll want a build that's a bit lighter like 90lbs but the cromotor and frame already weight in at 20.7kg(~45lbs) and battery probably another 10kg(22lbs). I guess could probably achieve a highpower 90lbs build
samoloh said:Is there a specific reason why almost everyone who has built a raptor so far is used a cromotor and no a different motor for their builds??