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Anybody bought the speedi planetary magnet?

KWOG

New Member
Jun 13, 2023
2
0
SE Iowa US
I was looking around for a way to raise my cutoff without playing with software or plugging in an electronic device. I came across the speedi planetary gear setup which makes the magnet spin 1.5 times slower. Has anyone used one of these on a bosch setup. I have 2022 Trek Rail 7 for reference.

Thanks,

Craig
 

Singletrack Scene

Active member
Nov 14, 2020
136
81
Nottingham
I was looking around for a way to raise my cutoff without playing with software or plugging in an electronic device. I came across the speedi planetary gear setup which makes the magnet spin 1.5 times slower. Has anyone used one of these on a bosch setup. I have 2022 Trek Rail 7 for reference.

Thanks,

Craig
I'm also considering one of these, I'm trying to understand its effects on speed/distance and range whilst installed. Mileage corrections for example. Total miles ridden won't be the same. - Other than that, I'm sold!
 

cakepanda

New Member
Sep 14, 2024
6
2
uk
I bought the Speedi and it worked really well for a few hundred miles, but then I got the dreaded Bosch 524001 speed sensor manipulation error.
Quite surprised that the bosch software managed to detect something like this...
 

Hattori-Hanzo

Well-known member
Apr 10, 2023
428
568
UK
I bought the Speedi and it worked really well for a few hundred miles, but then I got the dreaded Bosch 524001 speed sensor manipulation error.
Quite surprised that the bosch software managed to detect something like this...

Do you have your bike connected to the flow app while riding, and do you have activity tracking enabled?

General consensus is to not connect to the flow app if using a manipulator.

I'm also considering one of these, I'm trying to understand its effects on speed/distance and range whilst installed. Mileage corrections for example. Total miles ridden won't be the same. - Other than that, I'm sold!
Speed and mileage will record lower than actual, I believe cadence and power output readings are also affected. It pretty much makes the kiox redundant so I've heard.
 

cakepanda

New Member
Sep 14, 2024
6
2
uk
Do you have your bike connected to the flow app while riding, and do you have activity tracking enabled?

General consensus is to not connect to the flow app if using a manipulator.


Speed and mileage will record lower than actual, I believe cadence and power output readings are also affected. It pretty much makes the kiox redundant so I've heard.
Had the Flow app installed but denied it any GPS/tracking or data permissions.
Now trying the 90mins cycle in limp mode, but suspect will have to take back to bike shop.

If this continues to happen, will have to change e-bike to one with a more easily derestricted motor like Bafang.
 

Hattori-Hanzo

Well-known member
Apr 10, 2023
428
568
UK
Interesting, yours is the first report I've read of the system picking up a speedi.
Seems it's detection is getting more and more sophisticated, though I'm not sure how it gets the data if you don't have the app running.
 

cakepanda

New Member
Sep 14, 2024
6
2
uk
Interesting, yours is the first report I've read of the system picking up a speedi.
Seems it's detection is getting more and more sophisticated, though I'm not sure how it gets the data if you don't have the app running.
It's the second time this has happened to me. First time was, i think, my fault as the rear axle had become a little loose leaving the Speedi to occasionally slip in position which clearly would give erroneous speed data to the computer. I took it to the bike shop and they did a firmware update which cured the speed sensor error. I imagine that Bosch are aware of the Speedi and if average power figures look approximately 1.5x higher than expected overall for speed then it may trigger the error. Also the bosch software is expecting a specific min/max ratio for cadence and speed, however I was trying hard not to use the lowest couple of gears to avoid this pitfall.
I've emailed NLS components to see if they have had any other reports.
Maybe it isn't the Speedi, but I have a faulty speed sensor? That would be great if it were the case.
 

Embt

New Member
Aug 1, 2024
66
16
Dundee
Ye but up could change ur chain ring to a higher tooth and speed would be lower cadence and same speed surely bosch would know this. Unless the motor reads diameter too
 

xsurfy

New Member
Aug 23, 2024
7
5
Netherlands
I converted my Orbea Wild 2023 from ring sensor to Disc rotor sensor and bought a Speedi. NLS Components helped me out as the Orbea Wild 2023/24 is not officially supported.

Really happy with the outcome, 25 km/h is just to slow imho.
 

cakepanda

New Member
Sep 14, 2024
6
2
uk
update on my 524001 error with the Speedi. I took the Speedi off and the error disappeared plus speedo started working again. Inspected the Speedi - there was a thin film of dirt over the magnet which I suspect was disrupting the magnetic field slightly. Also distance from Speedi magnet to sensor was greater than with original magnet, so I ended up shimming the sensor to bring it slightly closer to magnet -now all working again as it should.

Interestingly, when I had the 524001 error, the speedo showed zero but the odometer was reading correctly as was average speed. So clearly the sensor was picking up a signal, but suspect bosch software calibrated for a particular strength of magnetic field and any less than expected throws the error.
 

Alex @ PLANET3.bike

Active member
Jun 18, 2019
28
32
Zagreb
The distance and strength don't really matter so long as it's enough to close the reed switch inside the sensor. If your bike was reading distance but not speed, it wasn't the fault of the speed sensor - it was the result of the error. You are already aware of the potential problem with the low gears which puts you outside the possible range of cadence and speed map, which is good, but what Shimano did was just constrict this range further and further until it became non-viable for any meaningful gain in speed (no errors with 1.2:1 ratio but that's a negligible bump in speed). Since SPEEDi is basically a copy of the old Shapeways LSS with some features mixed in from PLANET3 (such as mounting it on the bolt heads), it was a matter of time before this started to happen. I tested this at least 2 years before Speedi was even on the market and yes, everything works for a few hundred miles or kilometers (the ratio I tested was 1.4:1 as 1.675:1 resulted in errors rather quickly) but then two bikes started to receive limp mode errors. That's when I decided it was not worth playing with people's warranties and started replying to every Bosch inquiry that PLANET3 isn't supported because it is detectable by Bosch after some time. The amount of time depends on your use case: for people that did more technical climbs in low gears - they got the error sooner. For some who used the bike for commuting they could get away with 1500 km before the error appeared, but it did appear sooner or later. The only way to reliably derestrict a Bosch motor is via a chip, but even here you have a problem that Bosch themselves are cheating - what I mean is, they basically say in their algorithm for detection that if your bike is never ridden OVER the speed limit WITHOUT power - you have manipulated it. This is, of course, technically wrong and immoral of them, but hey.. it's the company behind Diesel-Gate. Imagine the following scenario: you load your bike onto your car, go to the trail head, ride it uphill below the speed limit (physics will set it so), then descent over the speed limit but without pedaling. Do 1500 km of this and you will be in limp mode error with a completely stock bike. They simply pronounced that never running into the speed limit is "impossible". This is why other chip manufacturers now advise to put the speed limit at 35 km/h or to some value where you still run into the speed limit from time to time. However, I've made a full derestriction device for Bosch but am still testing how to implement this occasional speed limit hit i.e. you'd have a power cut for 50 ms every few kilometers or so, telling the motor that the speed limit was touched but it wouldn't be something that you feel. That's how they handle the nominal vs. peak power problem. Bikes all have a nominal 250W sustained power output, but we know all of them basically have 700W motors that should be illegal. The workaround is that every 30 seconds or 1 minute depending on the manufacturer, there is a current drop in the motor that takes it from 700W to 250W for a couple of miliseconds - just enough to satisfy the "letter of the law" that it wasn't "sustained power over 250W for more than 30 seconds". Anyway, the world is full of unscrupulous people who are ready to copy and sell products without worrying about warranties and potential problems. Be careful out there.
 

cakepanda

New Member
Sep 14, 2024
6
2
uk
The distance and strength don't really matter so long as it's enough to close the reed switch inside the sensor. If your bike was reading distance but not speed, it wasn't the fault of the speed sensor - it was the result of the error. You are already aware of the potential problem with the low gears which puts you outside the possible range of cadence and speed map, which is good, but what Shimano did was just constrict this range further and further until it became non-viable for any meaningful gain in speed (no errors with 1.2:1 ratio but that's a negligible bump in speed). Since SPEEDi is basically a copy of the old Shapeways LSS with some features mixed in from PLANET3 (such as mounting it on the bolt heads), it was a matter of time before this started to happen. I tested this at least 2 years before Speedi was even on the market and yes, everything works for a few hundred miles or kilometers (the ratio I tested was 1.4:1 as 1.675:1 resulted in errors rather quickly) but then two bikes started to receive limp mode errors. That's when I decided it was not worth playing with people's warranties and started replying to every Bosch inquiry that PLANET3 isn't supported because it is detectable by Bosch after some time. The amount of time depends on your use case: for people that did more technical climbs in low gears - they got the error sooner. For some who used the bike for commuting they could get away with 1500 km before the error appeared, but it did appear sooner or later. The only way to reliably derestrict a Bosch motor is via a chip, but even here you have a problem that Bosch themselves are cheating - what I mean is, they basically say in their algorithm for detection that if your bike is never ridden OVER the speed limit WITHOUT power - you have manipulated it. This is, of course, technically wrong and immoral of them, but hey.. it's the company behind Diesel-Gate. Imagine the following scenario: you load your bike onto your car, go to the trail head, ride it uphill below the speed limit (physics will set it so), then descent over the speed limit but without pedaling. Do 1500 km of this and you will be in limp mode error with a completely stock bike. They simply pronounced that never running into the speed limit is "impossible". This is why other chip manufacturers now advise to put the speed limit at 35 km/h or to some value where you still run into the speed limit from time to time. However, I've made a full derestriction device for Bosch but am still testing how to implement this occasional speed limit hit i.e. you'd have a power cut for 50 ms every few kilometers or so, telling the motor that the speed limit was touched but it wouldn't be something that you feel. That's how they handle the nominal vs. peak power problem. Bikes all have a nominal 250W sustained power output, but we know all of them basically have 700W motors that should be illegal. The workaround is that every 30 seconds or 1 minute depending on the manufacturer, there is a current drop in the motor that takes it from 700W to 250W for a couple of miliseconds - just enough to satisfy the "letter of the law" that it wasn't "sustained power over 250W for more than 30 seconds". Anyway, the world is full of unscrupulous people who are ready to copy and sell products without worrying about warranties and potential problems. Be careful out there.
Thank for for such a useful and comprehensive reply. That's a bit concerning to hear. It is odd however that my error code disappeared immediately after removing the Speedi and installing the stock magnet - literally as soon as a pedalled a couple of meters.
I see your point about Bosch seeing if you pedal above the speed limit but am not sure that this would be the case. The rationale for this is that my very heavy cargo bike is pretty much impossible to pedal without assistance above it's speed limit. Hitting 15.5mph is like hitting a wall! However, if this is the case that Bosch is detecting if you never pedal without assistance above the set maximum speed, I wonder if lowering the speed limit in the Flow app would be sensible so that at least I hit the speed limit more often?
 

Hattori-Hanzo

Well-known member
Apr 10, 2023
428
568
UK
Interesting info, the detections seems so random, many people on Facebook groups reporting thousands of miles with zero issue, while others have issues within a few hundred miles.

I'm wondering if something else is to blame, faulty speed sensors 🤷‍♂️
 
Last edited:

Alex @ PLANET3.bike

Active member
Jun 18, 2019
28
32
Zagreb
I see your point about Bosch seeing if you pedal above the speed limit but am not sure that this would be the case. The rationale for this is that my very heavy cargo bike is pretty much impossible to pedal without assistance above it's speed limit. Hitting 15.5mph is like hitting a wall! However, if this is the case that Bosch is detecting if you never pedal without assistance above the set maximum speed, I wonder if lowering the speed limit in the Flow app would be sensible so that at least I hit the speed limit more often?

You might be taking what I said too literally. They're looking for you pedaling without the motor providing power at or around the speed limit :) If you hit 25-26 km/h and simply keep it there, that satisfies the condition they've set - but never running into a speed limit power cut is what they consider "impossible".
 

Hattori-Hanzo

Well-known member
Apr 10, 2023
428
568
UK
So If I'm understanding this correctly, as long as you hit the assistance speed limit (which is easy to do with the speedi) and use leg power beyond it regularly, you reduce the chance of the system picking up a manipulation?
 

checksum

New Member
Feb 28, 2024
10
6
Berkshire
Extremely useful posts Alex. I don't think I would have any problem hitting the limit regularly, but I'm slightly nervous about the cadence issue in low gears. Are we talking avoiding sustained steep climbs or does the motor keep a running tally of your activities such that it's not worth risking it at all?

Furthermore, does anyone know if the SPEEDi works in eMTB or tour+ modes? NJS claim it won't work in auto, otherwise they only mention eco, trail and turbo modes.
 

Alex @ PLANET3.bike

Active member
Jun 18, 2019
28
32
Zagreb
So If I'm understanding this correctly, as long as you hit the assistance speed limit (which is easy to do with the speedi) and use leg power beyond it regularly, you reduce the chance of the system picking up a manipulation?

Yes, but as @checksum said - there still remains the issue of very low gear speed vs. cadence which over time as your rack up enough time outside the "allowed" map of speed and cadence will likely cause a limp mode error.

Furthermore, does anyone know if the SPEEDi works in eMTB or tour+ modes? NJS claim it won't work in auto, otherwise they only mention eco, trail and turbo modes.

If those modes use the speed as one of the variables for adjusting the power assist levels - then it could be problematic but I don't see why it would not work completely. If the motor adjusts power based on speed, it's simply tuned to provide more power at lower speed and less power as you approach the speed limit so the cutoff doesn't feel as abrupt. If you put it in any "auto" mode - it should just provide let's say 5-10% more power over the whole range due to your 33% lower perceived speed due to gear ratio. That's why a Specialized bike equiped with a mechanical PLANET3 is faster than a bike equipped with a chip. Chips usually take 80% of the speed limit as a starting point for "lying" but you're already really close to the speed limit, while with a 3:1 planetary gear set you're at 3x lower speed (at 25 you're at 8 km/h) where the motor is naturally tuned to provide a lot more power.
 

xsurfy

New Member
Aug 23, 2024
7
5
Netherlands
Yes, but as @checksum said - there still remains the issue of very low gear speed vs. cadence which over time as your rack up enough time outside the "allowed" map of speed and cadence will likely cause a limp mode error.



If those modes use the speed as one of the variables for adjusting the power assist levels - then it could be problematic but I don't see why it would not work completely. If the motor adjusts power based on speed, it's simply tuned to provide more power at lower speed and less power as you approach the speed limit so the cutoff doesn't feel as abrupt. If you put it in any "auto" mode - it should just provide let's say 5-10% more power over the whole range due to your 33% lower perceived speed due to gear ratio. That's why a Specialized bike equiped with a mechanical PLANET3 is faster than a bike equipped with a chip. Chips usually take 80% of the speed limit as a starting point for "lying" but you're already really close to the speed limit, while with a 3:1 planetary gear set you're at 3x lower speed (at 25 you're at 8 km/h) where the motor is naturally tuned to provide a lot more power.
Hi there, according to NLS website the ratio is 1.5/1

"SPEEDi uses a mechanical planetary gear system to slow down the magnet by a factor of 1.5/1 meaning, for every 1 rotation of the magnet, the wheel has gone 1.5 rotations, therefore if your standard speed is 30kmph, it will now achieve 45kmph."

On theory 25 km/h = 38 ish km/h. That being said, the 3:1 (I asume its 3 wheel rotations) does not apply to Speedi..... Right? The only reason I use it is to avoid the "cut off" trying to jump something of consequence !! Very unpleasant feeling and dangerous.

BTW thanks for all the info on your previous posts.

Cheers
 

Alex @ PLANET3.bike

Active member
Jun 18, 2019
28
32
Zagreb
Yep, 2 different products. 3:1 is PLANET3, 1.5:1 is Speedi. Agreed on the jumping, that and starting from a stoplight followed by a truck going into something tight with a wall on the side (underpass) are the two most common nightmares with a restricted bike (at least for me).
 

checksum

New Member
Feb 28, 2024
10
6
Berkshire
The only reason I use it is to avoid the "cut off" trying to jump something of consequence !! Very unpleasant feeling and dangerous.
It's so jarring isn't it. I would give up the 680W power in a heartbeat if it meant just some leeway with the speed threshold to avoid such a dramatic brick wall effect occuring so regularly.

The main attraction for a mechanical device was the simplicity and lack of detection, but it's never simple with Bosch.

 
Last edited:

xsurfy

New Member
Aug 23, 2024
7
5
Netherlands
It's so jarring isn't it. I would give up the 680W power in a heartbeat if it meant just some leeway with the speed threshold to avoid such a dramatic brick wall effect occuring so regularly.

The main attraction for a mechanical device was the simplicity and lack of detection, but it's never simple with Bosch.

Yes it is! If the limit was 32km/h, I'm pretty sure hardly anyone would bother to derestrict their bikes. I had a Orbea Rise H15 (540w) previous the one I have now, downgraded the firmware (eTuning app) and change the region to US..... Happy camper :cool:
 

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