Firstly, why an e-bike? I'm 48 and I had a freak accident in June where I destroyed both hips. As at end November I'm now mainly on crutches, but on bad days, or days where a lot of 'walking' would be involved, I resort to a wheelchair. When I was riding I'd ride with various groups and took an awful long time to get fit enough to climb "mid-pack". Given the severe muscle wastage I've suffered (I was completely non weight-bearing for 14 weeks) it's going to take me a long time to get fit again. I always said I'd get one at 50, so its just arrived a little earlier than planned.
I've had a lot of time on my hands to do a lot of keyboard research and have managed to visit half a dozen shops to hear their take on it. It seems that it's getting almost difficult to buy a bad e-bike now, as everything from 2018 on looks cracking and the rate of development is staggering. I enjoyed this article:
https://ebike-mtb.com/en/best-emtb-2018-twelve-dream-bikes-review/
I loved the look of the Fantic, with the 27.5 rear and 29'er front, but the dealer I spoke to said if he ordered me one it might arrive next week or in 6 months, which didn't fill me with confidence.
I was seriously tempted by a 'Bulls E-Core Evo EN Di2', but I've always ridden 130mm'ish bikes, and the numbers 180mm and £6500 both seemed too big for me. I considered the Bulls 'AM RS Di2' at 150mm travel, but at £6500, too much Fox gold for my tastes and no stock in the UK, I ruled it out. Then I considered the cheaper Bulls Ecore Evo AM Di2 at £5500 (incl spare battery) , but it has a Yari fork and Bulls rims, which made me question what I valued and wanted to pay for. Bulls do some great looking bikes, and great specs, but nothing quite ticked my boxes. You can see loads of their bikes here:
https://www.justebikes.co.uk/category/e-mtbs/?swoof=1&pa_brand=bulls&really_curr_tax=17-product_cat
The reviews of the 2019 Levo have been outstanding, but have tended to be of the £6k+ bikes. I have a really helpful Specialized dealer near me, so paid them a visit. Seems the Levo's (all models) are flying out the door and they didn't have one in stock to show me, even the demonstrator was out. They aren't getting any more £4k models in until Feb. I compared all models. If you build up a table and compare the specs, it seems to me that you are paying quite a premium to go up the range (i.e. the additional £1000 doesn't seem to justify the components you are getting) and until you get to the £6k model I felt that the forks were sub-par based on the asking price of the bike (RS Sektor on the £4k model, RS Revelation on the £5k model). This was all helping though, as it was clarifying what I wanted. I priced up buying the £4k Levo, some RS Lyriks, DT Swiss hybrid wheels, Shimano Saint brakes and a budget dropper post and, assuming fitting parts myself, and selling bits removed, I think I'd end up with a really well spec'd Levo for around £5k. Except that I didn't really like the colours of the £4k bikes. My first full-suss bike was a Giant Trance, which I bought because it appeared to be the best bike at my price-point, and as capable as it was, I never really 'loved it'. It was a great bike, but this time round, did i really want to spend £5k on a bicycle and not 'love it'? Onwards....
So more research and reflection on what I wanted, which seemed to be:
https://www.mbr.co.uk/buyers_guide/electric-mountain-bikes-348254
This really rated the Vitus E-Sommet VR (10/10) and it was only £3599! Lots of great stuff, like Lyrik forks and DT Swiss wheels, but 170mm fork travel & SRAM brakes and the looks didn't quite do it for me and its out of bloody stock. Like, forever. New 2019's coming into stock in December apparently, bit pricier I think, but still under £4k. Best contender to date though. The same article had the Canyon Spectral:On 8.0 at £4.5k with Fox forks. This looked okay in the yellow, but had a few bits I wasn't sure about like EX8 speed and Fox suspension being the main one. But on looking at the Canyon site I found the 2018 7.0, and my mind was blown:
https://www.canyon.com/en-gb/mtb/spectral-on/spectral-on-7-0.html
Anyway, that's how I ended up with a 2018 Canyon Spectral:On 7.0. I still have a bit of physio and recuperation to do before I can ride it, but at least when the day comes I'll have some assistance. Which will come in handy as I live at the top of a pretty steep hill.
Cheers,
Rich.
I've had a lot of time on my hands to do a lot of keyboard research and have managed to visit half a dozen shops to hear their take on it. It seems that it's getting almost difficult to buy a bad e-bike now, as everything from 2018 on looks cracking and the rate of development is staggering. I enjoyed this article:
https://ebike-mtb.com/en/best-emtb-2018-twelve-dream-bikes-review/
I loved the look of the Fantic, with the 27.5 rear and 29'er front, but the dealer I spoke to said if he ordered me one it might arrive next week or in 6 months, which didn't fill me with confidence.
I was seriously tempted by a 'Bulls E-Core Evo EN Di2', but I've always ridden 130mm'ish bikes, and the numbers 180mm and £6500 both seemed too big for me. I considered the Bulls 'AM RS Di2' at 150mm travel, but at £6500, too much Fox gold for my tastes and no stock in the UK, I ruled it out. Then I considered the cheaper Bulls Ecore Evo AM Di2 at £5500 (incl spare battery) , but it has a Yari fork and Bulls rims, which made me question what I valued and wanted to pay for. Bulls do some great looking bikes, and great specs, but nothing quite ticked my boxes. You can see loads of their bikes here:
https://www.justebikes.co.uk/category/e-mtbs/?swoof=1&pa_brand=bulls&really_curr_tax=17-product_cat
The reviews of the 2019 Levo have been outstanding, but have tended to be of the £6k+ bikes. I have a really helpful Specialized dealer near me, so paid them a visit. Seems the Levo's (all models) are flying out the door and they didn't have one in stock to show me, even the demonstrator was out. They aren't getting any more £4k models in until Feb. I compared all models. If you build up a table and compare the specs, it seems to me that you are paying quite a premium to go up the range (i.e. the additional £1000 doesn't seem to justify the components you are getting) and until you get to the £6k model I felt that the forks were sub-par based on the asking price of the bike (RS Sektor on the £4k model, RS Revelation on the £5k model). This was all helping though, as it was clarifying what I wanted. I priced up buying the £4k Levo, some RS Lyriks, DT Swiss hybrid wheels, Shimano Saint brakes and a budget dropper post and, assuming fitting parts myself, and selling bits removed, I think I'd end up with a really well spec'd Levo for around £5k. Except that I didn't really like the colours of the £4k bikes. My first full-suss bike was a Giant Trance, which I bought because it appeared to be the best bike at my price-point, and as capable as it was, I never really 'loved it'. It was a great bike, but this time round, did i really want to spend £5k on a bicycle and not 'love it'? Onwards....
So more research and reflection on what I wanted, which seemed to be:
- Not massively bothered on motor, but if nothing else between them I'd probably go for Shimano based both on what I have read, and because I find their higher range kit to be great more often than not (not their hubs though).
- Not massively bothered on integrated battery either. At first I thought it was a must have, but looking into the pro's and cons of weight higher and further forward, potential added hassle when removing from the bike for charging, and battery size if wanting a spare, this became irrelevant. I.e. I'd be happy either way.
- Prefer any display to either be small or non-existent. I crash, things break, and I should probably spend more time on looking where I am going!
- Geometry similar to my Transition Smuggler
- I'd prefer RockShox Forks, preferably Lyriks, else Pikes or Yari (never had Fox, I've become a creature of habit)
- Preference for Shimano brakes and gears. I like SRAM gears, but less keen on SRAM brakes, given the choice.
- Definitely decent wheels, DT Swiss H1700's or HX1501's if at all possible
- 150mm travel give or take
- £4,000 all in would be good - would I need to spend more?
https://www.mbr.co.uk/buyers_guide/electric-mountain-bikes-348254
This really rated the Vitus E-Sommet VR (10/10) and it was only £3599! Lots of great stuff, like Lyrik forks and DT Swiss wheels, but 170mm fork travel & SRAM brakes and the looks didn't quite do it for me and its out of bloody stock. Like, forever. New 2019's coming into stock in December apparently, bit pricier I think, but still under £4k. Best contender to date though. The same article had the Canyon Spectral:On 8.0 at £4.5k with Fox forks. This looked okay in the yellow, but had a few bits I wasn't sure about like EX8 speed and Fox suspension being the main one. But on looking at the Canyon site I found the 2018 7.0, and my mind was blown:
https://www.canyon.com/en-gb/mtb/spectral-on/spectral-on-7-0.html
- Stealth black - works for me
- 150mm travel RS Lyrik
- DT Swiss H1700 wheels
- Shimano Steps motor
- Shimano Zee brakes and SLX/XT gears
- £3899
- 27.5 rear/29 front (remember that Fantic?)
Anyway, that's how I ended up with a 2018 Canyon Spectral:On 7.0. I still have a bit of physio and recuperation to do before I can ride it, but at least when the day comes I'll have some assistance. Which will come in handy as I live at the top of a pretty steep hill.
Cheers,
Rich.