Intercontinental Travel
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@Lia u take some pretty long trips. im not sure how many long tall hilly descents u get to ride on over there in uk. assuming i could bring the pint with me as carry on. how quickly u think im gonna gulp down those 40v 2ah ryobi batteries on a pint? thats what, 65% of the pint battery?
if im losing more than half my range on average, then i might need an obscene number of these things just to make reasonable use of them, right?
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@notsure There are only a handful and they're not super tall. On my 100km ride with the additional 16AH battery I climbed and descended over 2000ft if that helps. I mostly do full laps so never really end up with more of less on altitude lost/gained.
What sort of range are you looking for? You could simply bring an ultracharger and take pitstops at cafe's. Before I built a battery I did my 50km trips by pit-stopping at every McDonalds on the way and a few cafe's to both take a chill and add some juice to the board.
All this talk of extra batteries is giving me Rich Rebuild vibes back when he made a little
to have his own DIY charging network. -
@lia probably 8-12 miles on variable terrain. there are single track bike trails but its not loamy hardpan like u find out west. its farmland essentially. grassy fields. think sound of music. the gondola goes up about 3000ft. its got a midway station lol. they all do. there are lots of restaurants n bars n stuff. not exactly rural, but the slopes are miles n miles long. if u google earth "megeve, fr" ur right in the middle of the entire resort. its not the high alps, but its close.
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@notsure Wow that's a lot of hills.
Can't say for certain on expected range with this. On utterly awful terrain I've lost %50 but that's terrain where you'd be doing 5mph crawls and stalling frequently. -
Pints take 60v batteries for a VnR. Unfortunately, the brand that made 60v power tools has moved over on to batteries that do both 48v and 24v. Now my Pint is in Pint heaven, but if you VnR'd your board, I could set you up with a couple 60v 4Ah batteries to borrow here in Europe. I can ship them inside the EU no problem, I think. I loved doing trails on my Pint. I'm Pint Positive.
But you can carve-power charge with the 40v batteries. I'm making a carve power setup right now and have been searching and searching for a Goldilocks battery. I found a 13Ah 48v battery for under 300 EUR., which weighs a bit over 4kg. I'mma try it for charging my XR when I'm out on adventures in the woods. Last summer I did a 105km adventure on a Pint (with two charging stops) so a stock XR's range just feels skimpy!!
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@angusofstockholm Was that Greenworks you were thinking of? I think they still do 60V along with the other ranges.
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@lia It was the Powerworks ones that I can't get any more. I ordered a 6Ah Greenworks one from NL one time, since they don't sell those in Sweden. That's awesome if Greenworks're still going.
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@angusofstockholm Oh those guys~
Looks like Greenworks are still doing it, just checked the site.
https://greenworkstools.eu/global/en/accessories/batteries-chargers/60v/g60b6 -
@angusofstockholm said in Intercontinental Travel:
Last summer I did a 105km adventure on a Pint (with two charging stops) so a stock XR's range just feels skimpy!!
... he foresaw the journey in a fever dream...
... undeterred, he persevered, surviving upon lingonberries n rainwater...
... one day, he met a fox named Saga, and the two became best of friends!...
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@lia said in Intercontinental Travel:
Wow that's a lot of hills.
the scale is hard to encompass with pics. it differs significantly from west coast US in that the mean elevation of the surrounding valleys is rather low by comparison. like 700m vs 3000m. very temperate. more hospitable.
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i should probably swap the tire out too. what type of
tiretyre should i get? -
@notsure I would plan 6-8 mile rides even with lift access. I haven’t conducted any Pint range/regen tests but I’m assuming it regenerates much like the V1 which is typically double what I gain on my XR on the same grade. Obviously I use more battery on the V1 to get the same distance on the XR on flat ground or uphill. Pack a charger or get yourself a portable charging solution, plan accordingly and have fun!
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@hanahsdax said in Intercontinental Travel:
Pack a charger or get yourself a portable charging solution, plan accordingly and have fun!
thx! i was fearing 2-3mi but im reassured by that a bit.
i have a carvepower kit. the battery size limit for international flights without special approval is like 98wh a piece. so that's like a ryobi 40v 2ah.
but im still not 100% sure im going yet tho. thats technically my gt money.
i just figured it would make a nice thread. also good advertising.
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@notsure Now that is a sight to see, you totally have to snap a pic up there with your ride if you manage to do it :)
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@lia said in Intercontinental Travel:
@notsure Now that is a sight to see, you totally have to snap a pic up there with your ride if you manage to do it :)
its a gorgeous area. would be an easier trip for u. that pic is from a google earth street view panorama from the summit if u wanna look around. u can see all the bike trails!
what im wondering is how many ppl globally actively ride a Onewheel??? very curious about that.
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@notsure Just had a look, NyKo_BobZen has rode in the area.
https://app.onewheel.com/rides.html
Looks like they got lots of range on some routes like below even with large elevation changes. No mid-ride charges by the looks of it either.
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@lia cool thx!
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@lia this is Isla Mujeres, a smallish barrier island in the Caribbean just north of Cancun, Mexico. north end has a nice tourist industry last time i was there...
it's very flat. a Pint with a VnR kit would be a pretty epic accessory. as u can see, lots of golf carts, n scooters n stuff already. king tides can get u tho. would need a good badgering i suppose. bearing seals n everything. maybe some anodes. but u might need to 'buy' permission to use it in some places. thats why i think it would be nice to simply rent a onewheel in certain instances.
so how does one travel for onewheeling? what places are better? worse? what makes them so? an interesting puzzle i think. such a small market volume too.
perhaps onewheeling is predominantly a staycation activity?
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COMMENCING LUNCH TIME RANT:
so according to the numbers on that ow rides app, theres approx 200k public rides. my guess is most ppl only post a small number if at all. so i think a conservative estimate would be 100k active units worldwide. there may be more but i think a significant portion try to learn and quit before proficiency.
so if there are 100k units active worldwide, then arguably one could estimate the minimum number of ppl looking to rent one at any given time is at least equal to the number of currently active riders.
so given that value, out of 200k potential Onewheeler's worldwide, statistically speaking, a single outfitter looking to amortize their investment in a rental business would have to wait a long time to fully pay for the investment.
E-scooters, by comparison, have become so incredibly commonplace. They're everywhere! For an equipment outfitter in a place like Megeve, that cost may be easier to manage, but for a renter in Isla, a onewheel makes little financial sense.
the scooter Is easy and cheap and ubiquitous, which means the cheap pev market niche is already populated. so as a piece of rental equipment, the OW is relegated to the specialty rental market for now.
i would imagine this all would have become obvious during the Pint development process. so the question of why there is no stock VnR option or swappable FAA/TSA-approved battery design is quite legitimate. what was the pint designed for exactly? just to be cheaper smaller OW?
if i were a onewheel company, i would want to see if i can resolve that question.