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-   -   Hello Electric (https://www.bikeforums.net/folding-bikes/1166455-hello-electric.html)

bent4me 02-15-19 06:57 AM

Vello Electric
 
Anybody have info on the Vello folding electric bike out of Austria?
It has a great small fold like Brompton and comes both electric and non.
NYC Wheels in NYC was supposed to be US distributor but it doesn't show on their site.

Blackstrida_A_ 02-15-19 09:22 AM

https://stridacanada.ca/vello-bikes-update/

You might try to ask Bill for news. :)

avole 02-15-19 09:43 AM

Small fold? Awkward, yes, little protection for important parts yes, but small? I'd say Brompton wins unfolded :)

linberl 02-15-19 10:31 AM

I thought NYCewheels just closed up....

1nterceptor 02-15-19 12:37 PM


Originally Posted by bent4me (Post 20795686)
Anybody have info on the Vello folding electric bike out of Austria?
It has a great small fold like Brompton and comes both electric and non.
NYC Wheels in NYC was supposed to be US distributor but it doesn't show on their site.


Originally Posted by linberl (Post 20796019)
I thought NYCewheels just closed up....

There was a photo of a Vello bike(looks electric) in NYCEWheel's showroom back in Dec.
NYCEWheels showroom is closed; but the website is still open. I'd be very careful of ordering
anything though. Seems a lot of shenanigans going on; people/companies not getting paid.
https://www.facebook.com/NYCeWheels/photos/a.226044262801/10158011587507802/?type=3&theater " data-width="500" data-show-text="true" data-lazy="true">
https://www.facebook.com/NYCeWheels/photos/a.226044262801/10158011587507802/?type=3&theater " class="fb-xfbml-parse-ignore">Facebook Post

EDIT: looks like BF wont' let me link Facebook posts. If you go to NYCEWheel's FB page; there is
a Vello in the showroom. This post was from December.

Schwinnsta 02-15-19 02:53 PM

It looks like a nice bike but I question the electric or their advertising of it. So by pedaling you are charging it. Or is this just an option? It sounds simply like a regenerative motor. Do I this wrong?

Doc_Wui 02-15-19 06:09 PM

I've been seeing Vello news since about 2016. They have a bike motor with internal batteries. They like to advertise that you can put power back into the battery while riding. They used to imply you never needed to charge it.

Maybe if you start off on a hill, but ask any high school kid who built a bicycle powered generator for a science project. If it was efficient at all, all ebikes would do it.

Take away the crazy claims and it looks like a nice package.

Schwinnsta 02-15-19 07:28 PM


Originally Posted by Doc_Wui (Post 20796743)
. If it was efficient at all, all ebikes would do it.

Take away the crazy claims and it looks like a nice package.

Frankly, it makes me suspicious of the rest of it. Regen makes sense in a car where the rider weight ratio is small and you are not using your own calories to resupply it. But for a bike where rider is most of the load, then not so much. If you can turn this "feature" off, then OK, it might be a plus, use it on down hills and such, but if it takes the energy from your pedal strokes, than it is a negative for me. And I was not able to determine this.

berlinonaut 02-16-19 05:35 AM


Originally Posted by Schwinnsta (Post 20796812)
Frankly, it makes me suspicious of the rest of it. Regen makes sense in a car where the rider weight ratio is small and you are not using your own calories to resupply it. But for a bike where rider is most of the load, then not so much. If you can turn this "feature" off, then OK, it might be a plus, use it on down hills and such, but if it takes the energy from your pedal strokes, than it is a negative for me. And I was not able to determine this.

Recuperation is a nice but not mandatory thing to have. The (now discontinued) BionX motors used to have it i.e. and experience showed that in mixed terrain the gain was about 10-14% of reach in practice. Not too impressive, especially today with larger batteries being available and at lower prices than a couple of years ago.
In the flat the gain is obviously even less than that but there's another nice feature to the recuperation there: You can use it as a brake: As typically switching to recuperation is triggered by the brake lever and starts slightly before the actual brake starts to work you can break w/o using the bike brake and safe on wear there while having a constant, predefined amount of brake power. Equivalent to a ******er brake in big tucks or busses. Very comfy in the city with traffic lights, especially as the recuperation is configurable.
Recuperation only works with direct drives and is typically only implemented with rear wheel drives. Thus it is not very common today, with geared and non-geared front wheel drives being the common cheap upgrade solution for non-ebikes, non-direct rear wheel drives being a almost as cheap but less common alternative and mid-drives (where recuperation is not possible currently) becoming more and more the standard with factory e-bikes. And as recuperation adds to the cost of the drive and retrofit kits are mainly sold by their price it becomes even less common.

However: This has only little to do with the Vello. The Vello is using the Zehus motor. It has been on the market for a while already and - while being a bit exotic - it is used by a number of manufacturers and a clever design. While it is a rear wheel direct drive and offers recuperation there are some features that make it different: For one everything is within the rear hub. Motor, controller, batteries. This gives it a very clean look as there are no cables to go anywhere and no buttons or other elements anywhere. It also would make retrofitting a snap if there was a retrofitting kit available (which is not, they only sell to bike manufacturers).
With this concept obviously only a small battery is possible which obviously limits the reach of the motor. Therefore they implemented various power modes including one for recuperation and one for charging while pedaling. Again these are configurable as far as I know regarding their intensity. When I test rode a prototype of the vello about two years ago it was in charging mode, possibly set to a quite high intensity, and it felt like riding uphill in the flat. It was ony a very short ride, so not much to judge from there. I did not dive into the concept further but would assume that as you can configure the motor including the parameters for charging mode and recuperation using bluetooth via a mobile phone it could possibly be useful sometimes, i.e. by charging the battery in the flat in expectation of a steep hill a bit later on the route. So in theory this makes the bike offer an unlimited reach with electric support - which is in my eyes only very theoretical. A least this is what I got without diving deeper into it.

Other than that you can charge it via a wall plug wich connects to an electric connector on the axle of the rear wheel. W/o any recuperation or charging mode I'd - based on the size of the battery - assume that the bike would have roughly 25-40km of reach with electric support, depending on the support level. However: No practical experience of mine. So not so much a touring bike but sufficient for commuting and hopping around in the city. Which seems exactly what this bike is made for.

In general it is a nice bike but not my cup of tea. Regarding the motor part I especially do not totally buy into the concept of having to use a mobile phone for any configuration and change of modes. The motor steps in automatically (based on the mode preset), but any change of the mode needs the mobile and based on my experience with electric bikes and how often I change modes while riding I consider this very inconvenient. Would however need testing before coming to a final conclusion.

Worth mentioning is that with the Zehus motor - at least with the current version - there's no gearing available, neither internally in the hub nor via derailleur. Vello do offer a Schlumpf Drive in the bottom bracket, offering two gears which as usual comes at a price in terms of money and weight. One could possibly also use an Efneo drive with three gears in the bottom bracket.

There is as to my knowledge at the moment just one rear wheel motor on the market that offers internal hub gears but obviously does have batter and controller etc. outside the hub. There used to be a three-speed one from BionX but this is gone for quite a while already and also had the need for external parts.

Regarding the vello there's already a thread in this forum and also the kickstarter campaign page for the vello offers information and links to further information via the comments.

Schwinnsta 02-16-19 08:30 AM

Thanks for the write up. I did not if recuperation could be configurable.

Schwinnsta 02-17-19 12:34 PM

I read thru much of Berlinoaut's links. The bike itself, non motorized appeals to me. One drawback to the e version is that the motor does not kick in until 6 kph or do I have this wrong? I would want it to kick in ASAP.

Doc_Wui 02-17-19 07:13 PM

Probably saves appreciable power, not having the motor need to move the bike from a dead stop. It is a small direct drive motor, so it will not have a lot of torque. Let the rider get the momentum up,

smithchris 02-05-21 08:58 AM

After reading this thread and the entire velo bike thread which contains great zehus review by @jondron I'm still curious if there is anyone that has used the Zehus hub for longer time and could present their opinion?

I'm just about to buy one (on a non-folding bike, paired with efneo gearbox) and I'm wondering if its worth it. Other option I consider is iMotor with 130Wh battery, even 30 less than the zehus but in front wheel so alfine 11 in the rear would be just fine :) I'm having hard time decing between the two and need some help

Thanks


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