Howdy fellow int'l eMTBers, I'm JimBo from the foot of Mt Holyoke in Western MA, USA. My first MTB in 1991 was a Bridgestone MB-3, followed by a front-suspended (gasp!) 1996 Stumpjumper, which is still going strong for a college chum. In 2003 I went full-suspension with another Stumpy (now gathering dust in my garage), which saw under 100 trail miles after I turned 50 and battled Lyme Disease - for a third time - in 2012. Wish I was a chick magnet, but no, I'm a TICK magnet!
From 2012-15, climbing any kind of hill on a bicycle was excruciating, but then I saw a Facebook ad for the Sondors IndieGogo campaign in January 2015. $700 shipped to try an ebike - why not? That 60+ lb steel beast arrived in August '15, and is still going strong today. It got me back on the saddle, though its climbing prowess was sorely lacking (singlespeed, hub drive). It took me several more months to ascertain that mid-drives were the way to go.
Fast forward a few years, and I'm officially e-mountainbike-obsessed! I now own a few eMTBs, separately powered by Shimano e8000, Yamaha PW, Bosch CX, Brose T and TranzX. At age 56, I'm seriously pondering my 4th career change, trying to find a way into the cycling industry as ebike sales finally seem to reaching a critical mass here in the US. I've been doing more and more of my own repairs, upgrades and mods, and have gotten a couple of friends to acquire their own pedelecs. I've even made riding buddies out of a couple of folks who bought my old ebikes.
I intend to start posting more here - I've been fairly prolific on Electric Bike Review forums since 2016, but there aren't many eMTB-specific posters there. Just like there aren't a lot of pedal-assisted MTBers here in New England; the regional MTB association has lobbied its membership hard against adopting the technology since 2013, culminating last year with very long letter sent to New England MTB retailers. They've also convinced policy makers to exclude "Class 1" ebikes from "natural surfaces," which I find incredibly short-sighted.
Enough said for now? Thanks for reading, I hope to share trials and triumphs with y'all!
From 2012-15, climbing any kind of hill on a bicycle was excruciating, but then I saw a Facebook ad for the Sondors IndieGogo campaign in January 2015. $700 shipped to try an ebike - why not? That 60+ lb steel beast arrived in August '15, and is still going strong today. It got me back on the saddle, though its climbing prowess was sorely lacking (singlespeed, hub drive). It took me several more months to ascertain that mid-drives were the way to go.
Fast forward a few years, and I'm officially e-mountainbike-obsessed! I now own a few eMTBs, separately powered by Shimano e8000, Yamaha PW, Bosch CX, Brose T and TranzX. At age 56, I'm seriously pondering my 4th career change, trying to find a way into the cycling industry as ebike sales finally seem to reaching a critical mass here in the US. I've been doing more and more of my own repairs, upgrades and mods, and have gotten a couple of friends to acquire their own pedelecs. I've even made riding buddies out of a couple of folks who bought my old ebikes.
I intend to start posting more here - I've been fairly prolific on Electric Bike Review forums since 2016, but there aren't many eMTB-specific posters there. Just like there aren't a lot of pedal-assisted MTBers here in New England; the regional MTB association has lobbied its membership hard against adopting the technology since 2013, culminating last year with very long letter sent to New England MTB retailers. They've also convinced policy makers to exclude "Class 1" ebikes from "natural surfaces," which I find incredibly short-sighted.
Enough said for now? Thanks for reading, I hope to share trials and triumphs with y'all!