LOL Thanks much ER. Hopefully it flies down the road as good as it looks. I have no way of predicting what it's gonna do or how far it's gonna do it......yet. It has moderate wheel flop at slow speeds, but nothing that some raked trees couldn't correct.All I can say is WOW!
LOL Thanks much. It's been a ultra slow, laborious build going on 6 months now. I just want it to end already.I think I am in love.
(faints)
I am truly in awe. I don't know what to do. Drop everything and copy you, or move down next to you.
Thanks Buba! I hope it runs half as good as it looks cause I don't have a bottomless Research & Development Department backing me up to make a bunch of changes to it. LMAOWOW---JUST GREAT MIKE!!!
You have done it again!!!
Your first electric-- gas hybrid was a technical masterpiece and now
the Earth Crusher a no nonsense --get out of my way- I am coming through- rough and tough...
Best
LOL Thanks Buba! It's been painfully slow and never-ending but I think I finally see the light at the end of the tunnel. I'm always waiting on some part or another.WOW---JUST GREAT MIKE!!!
You have done it again!!!
Your first electric-- gas hybrid was a technical masterpiece and now
the Earth Crusher a no nonsense --get out of my way- I am coming through- rough and tough...
Best
That is the way of the motorized bike. Real fusion mechanics.The sad part is that almost everything you see was made in, and sold only from China and was thrown together by me over here in the USA.
Yep. I better brush up on my Mandarin. I'm probably gonna be needing at some point. Now, as much as I hate to, I gotta go gut that Italian made gas tank, and drill a huge hole in it.That is the way of the motorized bike. Real fusion mechanics.
I think the electrics will probably have a very easy life, and last a long time. The reason I say that is because, I don't think your suspension will allow you to go fast enough to get anywhere near being able to tax that monster. Not very often anyway. If you do go fast, I don't think it will be the electrics that fail.Is this electric stuff that I'm running built to last? I have no idea. So this is an attempt to find that question out.
Actually suspension, doesn't dictate speed, the condition of the road that you're speeding on does. Some of the fastest bicycles and motorcycles in the world have no rear suspension of any kind. Why is this? Because they're all speeding on a smooth surface. Only speed when the conditions of the road allow it. That has always worked for me whether I'm on roller blades, a skateboard, a bicycle, or a motorcycle. LOLI think the electrics will probably have a very easy life, and last a long time. The reason I say that is because, I don't think your suspension will allow you to go fast enough to get anywhere near being able to tax that monster. Not very often anyway. If you do go fast, I don't think it will be the electrics that fail.
Eventually I think you'll be wanting to find some suspension forks for it. My tail bone already hurts just thinking about it lol. Speed gets addictive you know.
There's absolutely nothing you can take away from it as it hasn't even rolled 1 foot under it's own power yet. It may not even turn on when I turn the key. The bike frame itself may self destruct like a Mission Impossible tape recorder.Well if it gets too rough you can always move to the salt flats. On my china girls, I've noticed above 30 the smoothest street becomes like a motocross track. A tiny crack becomes like the grand canyon, and the handle bars feel like you're holding a jackhammer.
I only make this comment as constructive criticism, not meaning to take anything away from your great work to get this far.
It looks to me like you're way over engineered on the tech side, and under engineered on the chassis side. Without care that could be a recipe to rip your pants lol.
Tiny cracks with 4" wide, 10 PSI, DOT motorcycle knobbies at 60 MPH will go by unnoticed or felt. Any bicycle tire made, however, would not stand a chance. My last bike, with multiple sets of different types of bicycle tires, had no suspension either. It was a living h3ll on Earth. LOLA tiny crack becomes like the grand canyon, and the handle bars feel like you're holding a jackhammer.
Once you go full sus there just is not any comparison IME. That electric your riding spoiled you lol. I know it did!! My first HT bike solid tail liked to have crippled meWell if it gets too rough you can always move to the salt flats. On my china girls, I've noticed above 30 the smoothest street becomes like a motocross track. A tiny crack becomes like the grand canyon, and the handle bars feel like you're holding a jackhammer.
I only make this comment as constructive criticism, not meaning to take anything away from your great work to get this far.
It looks to me like you're way over engineered on the tech side, and under engineered on the chassis side. Without care that could be a recipe to rip your pants lol.
Once you go over to motorcycle knobby tires, regardless of the mechanical suspension, with 12 or 14 PSI of air in the tires has much the same effect. Each knob is its own little shock absorber. There is no going back. LOLOnce you go full sus there just is not any comparison IME. That electric your riding spoiled you lol. I know it did!! My first HT bike solid tail liked to have crippled me
Nothing like crossing town to go in a store and it takes you twenty minutes just to finally stand up straight.
Once you go over to motorcycle knobby tires, regardless of the mechanical suspension, with 12 or 14 PSI of air in the tires has much the same effect. Each knob is its own little shock absorber. There is no going back. LOL