Which is merc and which is BMW?This is a Mercedes vs BMW discussion
Choose your weapon and fight for your life
Which is merc and which is BMW?This is a Mercedes vs BMW discussion
Choose your weapon and fight for your life
For me the only issue with Shimano is that the range you get from their in house batteries doesn't match up with what you get out of a Bosch equivalent - however, and somewhat anecdotally, it does seem that the range you get from brands who use third party batteries with a Shimano motor is better - e.g the YT decoy seems to get far more range out of its 540wh battery than the slight capacity increase would indicate over Shimano's 504wh, and the OG Focus Jam2's 370wh battery gives nearly as much range as the 504wh - thats just based on riding with mates.
Certainly not impossible, the answer is to get a Volspeed. Not cheap, no, but so far has worked flawless for me. And I can change the limiter using the regular handlebar control on the fly.Right up until l overtake him at 17mph, Shimano de restricted to "USA mode" 20mph with a bit of software, Bosch totally locked down and next to impossible.
I'd be really surprised if the Shimano feels noticeably more natural than the Gen 4's Tour+. Because Tour+ feels exceedingly natural, equivalent to Specialized which I've owned, and much more so than the e8000. The EP8 being a lot louder would detract from seeming "natural" I would have thought. On my e8000 it certainly did.Pedal inputs with your Shimano motor in both eco and trail result in a far more natural feeling ride than any of bosch' modes
I can select my limiter using the controller since I have a volspeed, and I too run 32km/h. I think that's the sweet spot. More and you just burn battery vs wind resistance. If they just had that available globally I don't think many people would derestrict past it.But as a regular MTB rider l found the 15.5mph cutoff too restrictive particularly on the road.
20mph is much better, it actually reigns in the assistance at around 19mph, but it means l can average 18mph on the road, which is great.
I guess, devices like the volspeed are going to be the only way for any motor going forward, by the looks of things...Shimano have locked their motor down better now.
The latest Shimano software blocks tuning or de restriction of the motor
Stunlocker certainly was excellent, and the benchmark out of all the ebike apps I've used, proprietary or otherwise. And derestricting was perfect - just set it to US, get 32km/h limit, job done. I really didn't take issue with the e8000 to be honest, I got rid of that bike because I felt it was undergunned with 140mm, and I think I was right. Might have been worth trying a better shock but that's always a dice roll.To me the STUnlocker was to the e8000 what the new Shimano app is to the EP8. It’s a brilliant piece of 3rd party software that helps you preset modes according to desired outcome. I’m sure Shimano saw it and took heed.
I really don't Gary... I got my new ebike 3 months ago, I sold my Knolly Fugitive to help fund it and haven't ridden an analog bike since.How much do you still ride normal bikes @Zed ?
End of discussion then really, eh?I really don't Gary
Or are we overlooking the possibility that if you have the largest, ugliest display with the crappiest buttons this drives people to pedal faster and harder so no one can see it ?That proves that currently, Bosch has the best logistical support, and the best riders gravitate to it.
Surprised at this. There’s a massive difference in feeling in power delivery and torque from the Bosch Gen 4 and E8000 in my experience. Was the Trek new and updated with the 85Nm mode / EMTB mode? I assume it was as it’s been around for a while.Rode a Trek Rail with Gen 4 a bit today and tbh the biggest difference is the ability to decouple the gear above assist speed. That’s miles ahead of the gloop I have to ride with the e8000.
Bosch just took all but one place in the Finale Ligure EWS-E. Nicole Goldi was on a Levo.
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Excellent points ??I think this thread evolved into something else than you think
Anyway, not the “power stages” where motors make the most difference this time? All three power stages had one other motor on 2nd, 3rd or 4th. That would be two times a Brose S Mag and once a Bafang M500(!).
With the humongous amount of riders on bikes with deals with Bosch, it’s almost standard equipment and starting to get ridiculous singling it out as a winning element. So, as there’s Bosch all over the results incl the bottom (how’s that reverse “top list”?), the average list placement, or that top-5 achievement share for these stages, is won by Bafang ahead of Brose.
That’s for Men. The Women only had those 4 entrants listed, and Bosch both “won” and was last (after a Brose again)
Yes, statistics is fun. But I’m getting pretty tired of looking up enduro results, photos of riders and ebike manufacturer websites just to get a subtle point that there’s too much emphasis placed on the “EU box rule” 250W motor component in enduro-e bike racing across I just wish the top riders’s physique and technique, and all the work put into bike geometry, material tech, weight distribution, and suspension linkage etc would get relatively the same appreciation as in analog bike racing.
That’s not the same as saying I can’t personally prefer one motor over another for my very unprofessional untimed mountain trail trips though.
Btw, most €10k+ top enduro world series specced emtbs are probably bought by chubby guys pushing 50+ like me, and oddly the EWS results by motor doesn’t transfer to trail dominance after all
Ah... A graduate of the Chris Porter skool of no manuals and plow everything.I tend to ride central with majority of weight through pedals unless real steep drops etc.
I tend to ride sitting on the bars facing backwards ;-)Ah... A graduate of the Chris Porter skool of no manuals and plow everything.
Please tell me you intentionally failed his saddle angle exam
I think this thread evolved into something else than you think
…
Btw, most €10k+ top enduro world series specced emtbs are probably bought by chubby guys pushing 50+ like me, and oddly the EWS results by motor (or bike or any component class metric!) doesn’t transfer to trail dominance after all
Not sure why, if the discussion in question is whether Bosch can feel natural like EP8. Do I not qualify because I don't ride a non-e bike? Weird. But if you say so, sure.End of discussion then really, eh?
I know from e-bike riding with a friend who is a serious road cyclist, the humans' power output and of course weight still matter a LOT! He still left me for dead on uphill stuff. When you take a human whose legs are pumping out an extra 150-200w continually, that just adds to the bikes power, and that's much more than the difference from one motor to another. Same with being 10kg lighter, still a huge difference. All that stuff still matters. We're talking about pros so they should all be highly trained but then, this EWS-E not EWS and I'd wager they're not all so close to each other like in the big league.I think this thread evolved into something else than you think
Anyway, not the “power stages” where motors make the most difference this time? All three power stages had one other motor on 2nd, 3rd or 4th. That would be two times a Brose S Mag and once a Bafang M500(!).
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