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Oh look, another hubless e-bike – and this one's a folder!

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Alex Bowden's picture

Alex Bowden

Alex has been editor of ebiketips since 2021, switching to a world with motors after seven years working on sister site road.cc, where he contributed news, reviews and the occasional feature. These days he combines his road riding with electric bike testing and a dash of ongoing cricket writing (his first book's due out in 2025).

3 comments

14 hours 26 min ago

The only benefit of hubless wheel would seem to be that you can put your arm through it.  Otherwise everything else seems worse.  Heavier; weaker; noisier; more friction, more complex bearings; can't use disc brakes; bearings much closer to the ground so more likely to get water ingress in wet weather or going through puddles etc.; highly unusual design so service and support very limited vs universal availability of support and parts for hub and spoke based wheels.

1 day 7 hours ago

I know what it means to raise or lower the centre of gravity, or move it forward or backward, but not what it means to reduce it.

It's about as meaningfull as saying you reduced the shape of something.

1 day 12 hours ago

It also goes on to claim that the bike boasts a “reduced centre of gravity” (um, what?) that “increases the bike’s traction when you turn, making going around corners much easier.”

- This may be true if it's a way of saying the front wheel is now a fair bit heavier than a normal spoked wheel. I'm out..