Bicycles

Delfast heads Offroad with electric fatbike

Delfast heads Offroad with electric fatbike
The Offroad model has a familiar Delfast look, but sports fat, low-pressure tires for off-road adventures
The Offroad model has a familiar Delfast look, but sports fat, low-pressure tires for off-road adventures
View 9 Images
The Offroad model has a familiar Delfast look, but sports fat, low-pressure tires for off-road adventures
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The Offroad model has a familiar Delfast look, but sports fat, low-pressure tires for off-road adventures
The handlebars are home to a trip computer and smartphone mount
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The handlebars are home to a trip computer and smartphone mount
The mirrors sport built-in repeat flashers
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The mirrors sport built-in repeat flashers
The Offroad e-fatbike features a hydraulic seat
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The Offroad e-fatbike features a hydraulic seat
Stopping power comes courtesy of hydraulic brakes front and back
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Stopping power comes courtesy of hydraulic brakes front and back
The Offroad offers a maximum throttle speed of 50 mph or three levels of pedal assist
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The Offroad offers a maximum throttle speed of 50 mph or three levels of pedal assist
Per charge range is reported to be 110 miles
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Per charge range is reported to be 110 miles
The Offroad features the same 5,000-watt rear hub motor as the company's Top 2.0 e-bike
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The Offroad features the same 5,000-watt rear hub motor as the company's Top 2.0 e-bike
The Offroad is IPX5 weather protected, Tektro E725 hydraulic brakes provide stopping power, and there's front and rear lighting
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The Offroad is IPX5 weather protected, Tektro E725 hydraulic brakes provide stopping power, and there's front and rear lighting
View gallery - 9 images

After carving up city streets and urban environs with its powerful, long-range electric bikes, Delfast is now heading into the wilds with its Offroad e-fatbike.

The newest member of the Delfast e-bike family rocks the now familiar Enduro frame, and features the same 5,000-watt rear hub motor found in the Top 2.0 announced back in June. That means a maximum throttle speed of 50 mph (80 km/h) or three levels of pedal assist. Per charge range is reported to be 110 mi (180 km), though regen braking could eke out a little more.

Many mountain bikes include a dropper seatpost that allows the seat to be moved out of the way while riders tackle hills, and the Offroad model here seems to offer similar functionality with its hydraulic seat. Smoothing out the rough terrain is helped along by fat, low-pressure Kenda JUGGERNAUT 26x4.5 tires, front fork suspension with 150 mm (5.9 in) of travel and DNM RCP-2S rear suspension.

Per charge range is reported to be 110 miles
Per charge range is reported to be 110 miles

The ride is IPX5 weather protected, Tektro E725 hydraulic brakes provide stopping power, there's front and rear lighting, and security shapes up as motor blocking, a built-in alarm and an onboard GPS tracker, though you'll need to install a SIM card.

Elsewhere, the adventure-ready e-fatbike has side repeat flashers on the mirrors, cooked-in Bluetooth, and a ready-to-ride weight of 143 lb (65 kg).

The Delfast Offroad e-bike has a starting price of €6,999 (about US$7,740) in black or white, with a red edition adding an extra €199 to the price tag.

Product page: Offroad

View gallery - 9 images
3 comments
3 comments
Mzungu_Mkubwa
Despite the premium accessories, this is quite a steep price considering its merely a Stealth Bomber with fat tires (pretty commonly available for less than $5k elsewhere...) I'd like to see them develop the style in their own direction - there's a lot that can be improved here from a design standpoint, IMO.
For the US market, its a shame that these don't better fit into a vehicle category that can be easily registered and driven on the roads. Would make a very effective commuter vehicle, for non-hiway use.
BeatleMacca
At $7740 you would think they would offer a banana seat and butterfly handlebars
WB
this is really an electro motorbike.. that weight is crazy heavy...