Most trike reviews get written in the first week, when everything is still shiny and nothing has had time to fail. I wanted to write a different kind of guest post — less “unboxing,” more “what does this thing actually feel like once it’s just your daily ride.” I’ve had the Freetan M-368X, Addmotor’s full-suspension semi-recumbent eTrike, in regular rotation for a while now, and the parts that stood out aren’t the ones that make a good first impression. They’re the ones you only notice after you stop paying attention to them.
The Seating Position Is the Real Selling Point, Not the Motor
Everyone talks about wattage and torque first. After three months, the thing I actually think about is the seat. The semi-recumbent layout — a 17.3 × 13.7 inch PU-cushioned seat with a backrest adjustable from 90° upright to 170° near-flat — changes what kind of rides you’re willing to do. A 45-minute errand run on a normal saddle is a “should I bother” decision. On this seat, it isn’t. There’s no wrist strain, no lower-back fatigue creeping in around mile eight, because your weight is distributed across your back and hips instead of concentrated on your hands and sit bones.
Combined with the sliding, automotive-style footrest, the whole cockpit adjusts to fit a wide range of riders — Addmotor lists 5’1″ to 6’7″, and having watched a couple of very differently sized people take turns on it, that range holds up. The 290 mm step-over height also matters more than it sounds like it should: getting on and off dozens of times a week, a low, ultra-easy mount stops being a nice-to-have and starts being the reason you actually use the trike instead of leaving it in the garage.
The Motor Doesn’t Get More Impressive — It Just Doesn’t Get Worse
This is where “safety first, practicality second” as a design philosophy actually shows up in daily use rather than on a spec sheet. The 750W rear-drive motor with its 1,400W peak and 90 Nm of torque behaves exactly the same on ride 60 as it did on ride one. No perceptible drop-off in hill-climbing power, no hesitation under load with cargo on the rear rack.
That consistency isn’t an accident. A lot of underrated motors — the ones badged higher than what’s actually inside — start out fine and then noticeably sag as they heat up under sustained load, because there simply isn’t enough stator winding or magnetic field strength to sustain the claimed output over time. The M-368X’s motor is physically built to the wattage it’s rated for, which is the boring, invisible reason it just keeps performing the same way ride after ride instead of quietly derating itself.
The Battery Hasn’t Given Me a Single Reason to Think About It
I’ve charged this pack dozens of times now on the included 48V 2A charger, and I genuinely can’t tell you it’s lost any noticeable capacity. That’s the point of the fully-potted 48V 20Ah Samsung cell pack — filling every gap between cells with thermally conductive resin isn’t just a heat-management trick, it’s also what keeps the cells from physically working themselves loose through months of expansion and contraction on every charge cycle. UL 2271 certification is table stakes at this point for any battery pack worth trusting; the potting is the part that actually determines whether that certification still means something a year from now.
The Small Stuff That Only Shows Up Over Time
A few details that didn’t register in week one but matter by month three:
- The differential. Cornering on a rigid rear axle trike can feel clunky — one wheel scrubbing against the turn. The M-368X’s built-in speed differential smooths that out, and it’s the kind of thing you only notice by not noticing it, ride after ride.
- The disc brakes, front and rear, plus the parking brake. Genuinely useful on hills when loading cargo — not having to hold the trike in place with your leg while strapping something to the rear rack is a small thing that adds up.
- The lighting system. The EB 2.0 five-in-one lighting (turn signals, hazards, flashers) sounds like a gimmick until you’re riding at dusk in traffic and realize how much more predictable you look to drivers around you.
- Internal cable routing. No dangling wires to snag cargo straps or catch on your leg getting on and off — a small detail, but one that matters daily.
What Hasn’t Changed My Mind
I’ll be honest about the trade-offs. At roughly 148 lbs, this isn’t a trike you’re casually lifting into a truck bed solo — plan for a ramp or help. Charging still takes 8–10 hours on the stock charger, so it’s an overnight commitment, not a lunch-break top-up. And a 380 lb total payload (280 lb rider, 100 lb cargo) is generous but not infinite — know your numbers if you’re hauling gear regularly.
The Actual Takeaway
The trikes that fail early almost always fail in the same places: an underrated motor that sags under real load, a battery pack with air gaps that lets one cell cook its neighbors, thin wiring that runs hot and ages fast, tires molded from reclaimed rubber that crack within a season. None of that shows up in week one. It shows up exactly when you’re three months in and stop paying close attention — which is precisely the point where the M-368X hasn’t given me anything to notice. That’s not a flashy conclusion, but for a vehicle you’re trusting with your safety every single day, boring and consistent is the whole review.






