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Folding electric bikes are a booming segment: light enough to carry, compact enough to store, yet powerful enough to make you smile when you twist the throttle. If you're evaluating high-end folding eBikes, especially those that cost more in the U.S., then the Rattan LM/LF Ultra deserves your attention. In this post, I compare Rattan LM/LF Ultra with the well-reviewed Ride1Up Portola, showing why Rattan offers superior value and performance in many key areas.
Here are some of the key specs of each bike:
From comparing the specs, there are several areas where Rattan LM/LF Ultra has clear advantages. Here are the main strengths:
Superior Power & Torque PotentialThe Rattan motor is rated at 1000 W sustained, peaking maybe ~1800 W peak, giving a lot more punch, especially when accelerating, climbing steep inclines, carrying two riders, or handling rough terrain. Portola’s motor is solid, but limited to ~750 W sustained.
Exceptional RangeThanks to the huge 40.5 Ah battery (~1,944 Wh), Rattan promises up to 100-120 miles in favourable conditions. If you ride conservatively with pedal assist, in flatter terrain, this can mean much fewer charging stops. For longer trips, weekend rides, or commuting longer distances, this is a major advantage.
Carrying Capacity / Passenger ReadyThe LM/LF Ultra comes from the factory with a rear seat, backrest, footrest — making it more genuinely usable for riding with a passenger. If you occasionally need to carry someone or extra cargo, Rattan gives you a head start. Portola does offer racks and passenger kits, but that is add-on rather than standard.
Fat Tires & Full Suspension for Comfort and VersatilityRattan’s fat tires (20” × 4.0”) plus full suspension (front and rear) make it much more capable on rough surfaces: gravel, dirt trails, potholes, snow, sand etc. If your rides are mixed terrain, or you care about comfort, Rattan has the edge. Portola has a suspension fork and decent tires, but not as beefy.
Strong Braking & BuildHydraulic disc brakes, robust frame; handling heavy loads, braking from high speed, or with two riders becomes safer with superior brakes. Rattan’s heavier duty parts are beneficial in that scenario.
Long-Term Use & Reduced “Range Anxiety”Because of its larger battery and more powerful motor, the Rattan gives more buffer in real-world conditions: hills, wind, detours. Even though heavier, many riders find this trade-off worth it if they don’t want to worry constantly about battery running out.
Better for Off-Grid or Wild RidesIf you ride outside smooth pavement — trail access, beach, snow, or more rugged roads — the LM/LF Ultra is built for that. The combination of fat tires, strong motor, and higher range means you can go further off road or farther from charging infrastructure than lighter, less powerful folding bikes.
To be fair, there are places where Portola still has advantages, or at least where Rattan’s strengths come with trade-offs. Knowing these gives a more balanced view, and helps identify which bike is “better” depending on your needs.
Weight & Compactness: Rattan LM/LF Ultra is heavier (battery + frame + fat tires + suspension). Portola is lighter, easier to carry, easier to store in tight apartments or small car trunks.
Initial Cost & Ongoing Maintenance: More powerful components & bigger battery = often higher cost, potentially higher service or replacement cost.
Acceleration / Responsiveness at Low Speeds: Sometimes big fat tires + full suspension can make the bike feel less nimble at very low speeds or when folding/unfolding.
Legal / Regulatory Limits: In many jurisdictions, the top speed, power rating, or battery size may have legal limits; using a bike that exceeds them may restrict where/how you can ride it (license, registration, road classification, etc.).
Putting together the above, here's why I believe that for many potential users — especially those who ride more than just short commutes, those who carry loads or passengers, or who need off-road versatility — the Rattan LM/LF Ultra gives more value than many “expensive” folding eBikes, even if sticker price is similar or higher.
You essentially get twice the usable range (in ideal vs moderate conditions) compared to many mid/upper folding eBikes, meaning fewer chargers, fewer “range worries”.
For people who want to ride with someone else (kid, passenger) or carry heavier gear, Rattan already includes the necessary comfort add-ons — so you don’t need to buy many upgrades.
The off-road / all-terrain capability means you’re not locked into only city pavements. One bike can serve commuting, weekend adventures, beach, etc.
Even though it’s heavier, much of the handling discomfort from weight is offset by its strong motor and fat tires — so in many rough situations, it feels more stable than a lighter bike with thinner tires.
Rattan's specs suggest that its durability / long-term capability is oriented toward more demanding users; strong brakes, robust motor, good battery capacity etc. If you plan to ride a lot, over varied surfaces and distances, that robustness may save you cost (less wear, less need for replacements/upgrades).
To make the most of its strengths, and avoid regrets, here are some things to consider carefully:
Where do you store it? Even though it folds and can go in car trunks, its folded size & weight are nontrivial. Good folding mechanism matters.
How heavy are you / how steep are your hills? Big motor helps, but battery drain can climb with steeper terrain or heavier loads.
Where you ride most: if you ride mainly city flat roads, maybe you don’t need all the off-road capability — but having those capabilities gives you flexibility.
Local laws and bike classifications: check what maximum power / speed / battery size is legally allowed for eBikes where you live. Riding a 32 mph capable bike may limit you legally or require special licensing in some areas.
Maintenance & Battery Charging: big battery means longer time to recharge; heavier motor means more stress; ensuring good maintenance of suspension, braking etc is more important.
If you’re someone who wants more than just a folding bike to get from A to B — if you want ample range, real off-road or mixed terrain capability, the possibility to carry a passenger or cargo, and to ride with confidence in demanding conditions — Rattan LM/LF Ultra is a bike that clearly delivers.
While Ride1Up Portola is excellent in its category (folding, affordable, decent performance), it’s optimized more for moderate commuting, lighter loads, and more city-focused use. Rattan stretches what a folding bike can do.
So, unless your priority is minimal weight, ultra portability, or strict budget with mostly paved/stable roads, I believe LM/LF Ultra gives better “value per mile / per lb / per adventure” than many folding eBikes you’ll find — especially those priced similarly or higher.
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