Well I fixed up a stand.
I used a new kick stand that was too short and cut the legs off and left 2 stumps. I welded a piece of thick pipe over the stumps to the legs base.
Then I shoved some foil into the pipe holes to make a spacer and stuffed the legs I cut off back into the pipes, and I added foil until the bike stood straight. I then arc welded; the base, to pipes, to legs solid.
The result is a stand that is much stronger then the original. The bike stands on the back wheel with front wheel about a proud 50 mm in the air off the ground. I can comfortably sit on the bike with feet off the ground when the bke is up on the stand and the legs do not spread what-so-ever.
I must take a picture of this truly amazing bike stand with me sitting on the bike with my full weight
However the modification blues has struck again.
The kick stand just rubs against the chain in the up position. SO I now have to put a weld spot on some part so it doesnt sit in its full poistion.. I can get a better spring for it.
Monkey youre right. The rack does lean to one side. The problem is one of the beam has hole too high on one side and too low on the other,
The lagrer problem is even if I loosen all the bolts set it straight and hold it there when I do the bolts back up, the rack goes rock solid back to this position and will not budge. Maybe a good sign at least that the rack is reliable to the fact the rack wont move about.
I just have to drill a long hole in a single beam and drop the high side to meet the low side. It isnt that much and can be fixed.
A lot of things will become much easier to do now I have the stand working enough to stop the thing from falling over.
Ebike 101 should state, A sufficient bike stand should be installed before any other device, but the problem is that you don't know how to stand a bike without the other devices being installed.
Its a catch-22 situation, In old SLA days and with motors where the wires come straight out the end of the axle, a good stand was critical to avoid an absolute disaster.