I especially liked the thickness of Gocycle's proprietary 2.25-inch all-weather tires, which were fun to ride on the dirt and gravel paths in a park around my house. They were fat and stable, and I worried a lot less about hitting a pothole or crack in the road at high speeds.
Dashboard Confessional
Instead of a permanent console attached to the handlebars, the GX has a small LED battery display. If you’re just jumping on your bike for a quick errand, you can quickly see how much juice is left in the tank.
But for longer rides, you can slip your phone into two rubber loops on the handlebar. After you turn on the bike, you can connect your smartphone to the bike's computer via Bluetooth. When you turn your phone sideways, the app reconfigures to look like a car's dashboard, so you can check statistics (speed, distance traveled, battery life) while you're riding.
The menus in the app are not as much fun to look at, making the app a little hard to navigate. To customize and adjust your assist mode, you select the mode editor and then adjust the level of motor assistance by sliding your finger across a graph showing the pedal power in watts.
For example, I found out that for tooling around my neighborhood, I liked for the motor to wait until I've applied about 200 watts of pedal power before kicking in, and I prefered a gradual increase in pedal assist after that. The Gocycle also lets you tinker with its preset modes if you want.
Using your phone as your bike's console is a pretty ingenious idea. On long rides, I sometimes like to listen to podcasts on a Bluetooth speaker, and having my phone accessible means that I don't have to dig in my backpack whenever I want to start a new episode. It does, however, mean that long rides in the rain might not be a great idea.
I also didn’t like the proprietary front pannier at all. It easily clips onto the bike’s handlebar stem and comes with a padded shoulder strap for off-bike use, but I found its cube-like shape to be bulky and uncomfortable to carry. I ended up switching back to my backpack.
At $3,299, the GX is about as expensive as the electric cargo bikes that I reviewed recently. With their multiple cargo options and higher weight limits, those bikes are more complete car replacements. The GX is expensive enough, heavy enough, and limited enough to put it out of reach for many people. But thoughtful details like the fat tires, smooth and customizable acceleration, and covered cables, gears, and chains means that the GX looks fantastic and feels great too. If you have a few grand left over after you finish repairing your yacht for the season, the GX might be a great pick.