I have one, and have found it clearly does not replace the side-by-side, but is great for getting into the woods and to the far blinds. Changing rear flats is a pain (experience), but overall it has been a good purchase. It also makes me plan what I need to take to the blind, and is great for checking a few non-cell cameras that I still have out there.
Mine will definitely NOT climb step hills, although it does pretty good in first gear. If the battery goes dead, be prepared for a workout! Another lesson from experience
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Three years ago I was asked to report the "good, bad and ugly." Here it is:
Good: This particular e-bike is the Heybike Mars Electric Bike Foldable ith 500W Motor, 48V 12.5AH Removable Battery, Shimano 7-Speed and Dual Shock Absorber with a rider weight rating of 300#. The heybike brand is still going strong. While made in China, these are distributed by a California based company, so parts are available. Another good--I've not needed any parts from the company. The original price was $950 including shipping. Top speed is 26 mph, which I can realistically achieve only on a slight downgrade. In the woods, 8-12 mph is normal.
The battery is good for a long weekend of hunting. This was tested during a recent management hunt that included several hours of scouting followed by approximately 14 miles going to and from the hunting areas. I put 23 miles on the bike, and when I arrived home, the battery was dead, but it never left me stranded.
The bike is quite, and with the factory rack and additional mounts, can carry a two man pop-up blind, two small Tri-pod chairs and my hunting bad with "stuff."
Rear flat tires are a pain (I've had three). The last one I fixed using the green-slim stuff, and it actually worked. The rear derailer will get caught is brush and tale weeds. I am on number three. These are cheap ($10). The first was replaced under warranty, the others I bought off amazon. This is a problem with all e-bikes with external deraillers. I've learned to avoid tall weeds, grass and soybean fields. I had to adjust and tighten the headset, and the brakes can be noisy (if you are not careful).
There is "no ugly" yet.
Overall: The heybike has served me well. It is not as powerful as some, but does better than I anticipated and qualifies as a "bicycle" for Missouri parks (750 watt limit).
The current model is the Heybike Mars 3.0, which boosts a 1400 watt motor and top speed of 32 mph.
