Emmo Urban S Electric E-Scooter. Another Design Flaw Discovered!
Пікірлер: 8
@mitchjimmy29622 жыл бұрын
Hows it holding up 5yrs later?
@steverolfeca8 жыл бұрын
Rule #1 w/inexpensive bicycles, electric or otherwise: loosen, loctite and then torque every fastener properly, before you ride it. Literally every one, but pay special attention to anything related to wheels, steering or brakes. Saves time and money because you don't keep losing oddball metric fasteners. Also, other components don't beat themselves to death because they're loose.
@gardnerhamilton4 жыл бұрын
do you find you get a lot of chain whip and hitting the frame or did you move the back wheel all the way back?
@telumatramenti72505 жыл бұрын
Wish there was a way to adjust shocks. They are way too loose. You get speed shimmies a lot when going downhill, beginning at 30 km/h. The way they are set you need to have 2 people riding so that they feel properly set and speed oscillation is reduced. This e-moped is a neat idea, something that's not quite a moped and not quite a bicycle, - apartment-size under 50 kg, and is very convenient because of it, but it definitely needs work. There are many little annoying imperfections with its design
@joshmarcum70837 жыл бұрын
Get blue locktite at any auto parts store
@Tradingviewzz4 жыл бұрын
Bro can u tell me like it can fit in a car
@horror7808 жыл бұрын
Next squeaky breaks.
@telumatramenti72505 жыл бұрын
I had to extend the brake screw almost all the way. On my emmo the break pads were set so close to the wheel hub they squeaked simply when moving the bike around. Functional breaks need some space to clamp. This reduced squeaking a lot. But in actuality squeaking occurs due to buildup of abrasive gunk on the rubber pad. If you want it completely gone you need to clean and file it off every couple of months, but it's a lot of work. To make sure the buildup doesn't appear quickly, - leave generous amount of space between break pads and break more forcefully closer to the spot where you want to stop rather than slowly teasing them. It's a technique you want to work on