During a recent offline tech event in China, one of our colleagues had the chance to try a small device that promises something unusually practical: turning a regular bicycle into an electric-assist bike in under ten seconds. The product is called Kamingo, built by a team of former Huawei and BYD engineers, and it aims to offer a lightweight, reversible alternative to buying a full e-bike.
A tiny kit with big ambitions
Kamingo weighs just 2.3 kilograms and consists of three pieces: a friction-drive motor that presses onto the rear tire, a bottle-shaped battery pack that fits into a normal bottle cage, and a handlebar controller. First-time installation takes about three minutes, but afterward the device can be attached or removed in less than ten seconds, without tools.
Once installed, Kamingo offers three modes:
- Standby, which lets the bike ride normally with the motor lifted off the tire
- Assist, which provides pedal-based power support
- Cruise, which drives the bike electrically without pedaling
The battery, made with 21700 EV-grade cells, supports up to 90 km (55 miles) of range in assist mode and doubles as a USB-C power bank. During our brief test ride, the motor remained surprisingly quiet — rated at ≤ 56 dB, quieter than typical conversation. The system uses Pressure Adaptive Technology to adjust the motor’s contact force based on load and surface conditions, reducing slipping and improving efficiency.
Both the motor and battery carry IP66 dust and water protection, and safety features include tilt-cutoff (power stops if the bike tips) and foreign-object detection. The controller itself is also quick-release, making it easier to lock the bike when parking.
A clever idea, with natural limitations
Like all friction-drive systems, Kamingo works best with smoother tires. Bikes with aggressive mountain-bike treads or certain fender setups may need adjustments for ideal performance. And while the peak power is rated at 750 W, continuous torque and long-hill performance will still depend heavily on rider tests and real-world conditions.
Still, for riders who don’t want to buy and maintain a full e-bike, the idea of a reversible, on-demand electric assist is compelling.
Price and who it’s for
Kamingo launched on Kickstarter with early-bird pricing starting at US$349 (about RMB 2,480) — far below the price of most complete e-bikes.
It’s aimed at riders who:
- commute but don’t want a heavy e-bike
- ride casually and want occasional assistance
- prefer keeping their existing bicycle but want a modular upgrade path
A companion mobile app allows users to lock the motor, view ride data, access maintenance guides, and join an online community of riders.
The bottom line
Kamingo isn’t trying to replace high-end e-bikes or compete on sheer power. Instead, it delivers something simpler and more flexible: an instant electric upgrade that preserves the feel of a normal bicycle.
If long-term performance proves reliable and compatibility issues remain manageable, this ten-second add-on could carve out a new category in e-mobility — one where electrifying a bike is as quick as clipping on an accessory.
