I have a 2020 Whyte E180 RS with the gen2 Bosch CX Performance motor .......ie Purion controller. I also have a Whyte E160 RSX which is the same motor but with the Bosch Smart System.
I love both bikes! The E180 is especially capable when the ride involves steep descents and/or really rough terrain whereas the E160 RSX has a much broader range of use so gets used a lot more than the E180.
I can of course tune the riding modes on the E160 using the Flow App and I have found a setting for EMTB which essentially means it is virtually the only mode I use. The key difference I have made with the settings is to enable more power from the motor at much lower cadences with the result that the bike is far better when "trials" type riding is required to negotiate technical terrain.
So after all that background my question is how do I achieve something similar with my E180. As it stands I always have to be at a fairly high cadence to get reasonable motor assist. Again I mainly ride in EMTB and I could use turbo more, but turbo is too on/off and makes control more difficult.
I have considered:-
1. selling the E180 and buying a new E 180 with the Smart System but I like the E180 too much to sell it for what it might fetch on the current second hand market. The E180 RS is out of warranty of course but has only covered 950 miles and has ( in my opinion) all the best kit. Factory Fox 38, Factory Fox x2, DT Swiss Hybrid 1700/350 hub wheelset, X01/GX transmission.
2. I took a look at Nyon because it apparently has an option to set custom ride profiles.......but it is about £350 for a retrofit kit and fitting in place of Purion looks to be a motor drop job. Also not sure the custom profiles will help since they are based on speed rather than cadence or torque. There are also questions about Bosch is actually still supporting Nyon.
3. Longer term maybe but I was interested in a post on here some time a go by a guy whose Bosch motor has broken..out of warranty...so he considered buying a Smart System motor plus the Smart battery and controller, cables etc. Obviously an expensive option and only viable if the motor needs replacing anyway.
I love both bikes! The E180 is especially capable when the ride involves steep descents and/or really rough terrain whereas the E160 RSX has a much broader range of use so gets used a lot more than the E180.
I can of course tune the riding modes on the E160 using the Flow App and I have found a setting for EMTB which essentially means it is virtually the only mode I use. The key difference I have made with the settings is to enable more power from the motor at much lower cadences with the result that the bike is far better when "trials" type riding is required to negotiate technical terrain.
So after all that background my question is how do I achieve something similar with my E180. As it stands I always have to be at a fairly high cadence to get reasonable motor assist. Again I mainly ride in EMTB and I could use turbo more, but turbo is too on/off and makes control more difficult.
I have considered:-
1. selling the E180 and buying a new E 180 with the Smart System but I like the E180 too much to sell it for what it might fetch on the current second hand market. The E180 RS is out of warranty of course but has only covered 950 miles and has ( in my opinion) all the best kit. Factory Fox 38, Factory Fox x2, DT Swiss Hybrid 1700/350 hub wheelset, X01/GX transmission.
2. I took a look at Nyon because it apparently has an option to set custom ride profiles.......but it is about £350 for a retrofit kit and fitting in place of Purion looks to be a motor drop job. Also not sure the custom profiles will help since they are based on speed rather than cadence or torque. There are also questions about Bosch is actually still supporting Nyon.
3. Longer term maybe but I was interested in a post on here some time a go by a guy whose Bosch motor has broken..out of warranty...so he considered buying a Smart System motor plus the Smart battery and controller, cables etc. Obviously an expensive option and only viable if the motor needs replacing anyway.