Hacks & Odds
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Today I cobbled together a different Onewheel Plus from the one I usually ride. It looks similar to my V1 and Leaderboard Onewheel Plus, with an EGO battery hanging over my lead foot, a crude wooden fender/platform, a "shorty" trailing footpad (as I cut the plastic wood pad of my other Plus in half to share), and freewheel brakes. I borrowed the connector cover from the OneDanXR, and I used my extended steel Ruckus Rails. The sensor footpad is from my original V1, and I hope it works well with no issues. Oh! And the top cover of the fender/platform is the old V1 rear footpad screwed onto the resized 2x6 sides.
A tornado watch in effect until tonight, still I'm going to strap the cobbled Onewheel Plus on the back of my Nakto Camel and pedal to the Greenway to test it out.
Edit: No tornado -- yet, anyway. Actually, the sun was summer shining most of the time out -- although threatening dark clouds hung low and wide on the way back home. The cobbled Onewheel Plus acted as it should -- a pleasure to ride -- no visible daystreak, though. Edit, yet again -- I think I will drop off the Daystreak Leaderboard with that Onewheel Plus to see where this one ranks.
Edit, again: A look at the shorty footpad (white plastic wood), and at the fender platform using an old trailing footpad,
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@s-leon using that footpad as the lid of the fender messed with my head for a moment….
Maybe you could cut a wedge shaped piece of wood, screw it to the fender and make a home brew flight fin :) -
This is really odd but today I put some screws in my fender holes with my hacked together OW tool. Decided to go fenderless and was always staring at the void. When I wrap it again, I'll probably just cover them up.
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@blkdout That's neat.... A fender hole delete :)
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@blkdout thats a cool tool!!
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@puzz360 said in Hacks & Odds:
@blkdout That's neat.... A fender hole delete :)
I almost didn't post it, it's so silly lol, but I was in a silly mood I guess.
@cheppy44 said in Hacks & Odds:
@blkdout thats a cool tool!!
Highly recommended, even without my little socket hack. Enough leverage for the axle screws and all. There's a cheaper, fixed version but the modular one that breaks down is nice for travel: https://www.amazon.com/Fix-Sticks-Modular-T-Drive-Wrench/dp/B08S6P4LSB?th=1
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On my shorty back footpad made of plastic wood, wet weather was making it slippery footing -- not extremely slick, but I would have to stop and reposition after going over bumps in the Greenway. So, my solution was screws up from underneath poking their points a bit above the surface. Works great!
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On Saturday when I went down and my Onewheel Plus tumbled end over end, the wooden freewheel brake bar/rail shattered with the cartwheel-type impact. Still hanging on, not really interfering with anything except for making mounting the board a bit awkward, the broken freewheel brake bar/rail has stayed that way until today, Wednesday.
Remembering a scrap of 1" pvc around, I wondered if it might solve the problem of wet, deteriorating wood -- from the weather, rain and snow on the Greenway. Turns out the 1" pvc fits in the channel of the Skyjacker rails nicely, sticking out beyond the rails about two and a half inches. To give the screws something more to bite into I added scraps of 3/4" cpvc, sliding them inside the 1" stock then running screws through the rail holes. At the same time I wrapped the undersides with about 10 inches of bicycle tire scrap section.
Somehow, visually, the effect is a little like dual exhaust pipes on my funky, homemade-looking Onewheel Plus -- not that that was the intention. Another day, when I am ambitious to do so, I might angle the ends of the pvc for better pavement/ground contact during use. Photos? Maybe to come.
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@s-leon leon... it's time...
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I'd love to see a time-lapse of this Plus through the years. From this pic it's like a snowmobile with the skiis upfront ^-^
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Lately on the Greenway the still water ponds, lakes, and swamps have been thinly glazed over with ice. So, here's a solution of mine for cold batteries. Riding my ebike to the trail, then it sits in the cold for an hour or more. Similarly, riding to the trail the EGO batteries I use for my Onewheel had been subjected to the cold of the trip.
Solution? I mounted a beer cooler to the rear rack on the ebike, behind the Onewheel. In the cooler in a towel I put a couple of warm red clay bricks straight off my fiery, active wood stove. Then for the trip out, in the cooler I put my EGO batteries. When I park and lock the ebike on the trail, I trade, and put the ebike batteries in the cooler. The heated bricks keep everything warm -- for the trip, and for hours.