Oh.. also. With the E8000 in it's standard configuration trail is set to LOW and as such for me didn't offer enough of a difference from ECO. I changed mine to MED and it's far better all round for my use. This should be configuarble to taste just the same on the E7000.
Something I wish both motors had was some sort of properly custom settings relating to how the motor delivers it's power assistance with regards to cadence as Shimano assume 100rpm is fast. I on the other hand don't consider that to be anywhere close to a fast cadence. When my motor was new it actually shut off assistance at around 135-140rpm but I think through firmware tweaks it no longer does. But it'd still be nice to be able to control where the sweet spot is for riders with preference for either a low, high cadence or freaks like me with high peak but very wide cadence range. But that's just a tiny niggle and something most riders wouldn't even understand nevermind want. In reality it works really well without it.
I don't even get what all the song and dance about a motor making a slight noise is all about. It's a motor. embrace it! It's hardly loud.
I guess its just a matter of perception. The only motor i have ridden is the brose and apart from my latest 2018 they have been totally silent
With the Shimano Steps App.Out of interest how do you re-configure a Shimano E8000 motor? Im yet to receive my bike so have no idea? Does re-configuring have any affect on warranty?
Great thanks. A little like Specialized Mission Control then but with less options.With the Shimano Steps App.
It's just simple configuration settings. Eco isn't adjustable, Boost and Trail can be Low, Med or High. The rest of the settings are mainly just display options for the screen on the bike.
None of it affects warranty
does that reactive mode work on the e7000 as well?If the e7000 puts out less peak power than I would presume it uses less battery ? The trail mode on the shimano s is reactive, it senses your inputs and reacts accordingly, upping the support to near boost levels if it thinks you need it.
If the e7000 puts out less peak power than I would presume it uses less battery ? The trail mode on the shimano s is reactive, it senses your inputs and reacts accordingly, upping the support to near boost levels if it thinks you need it.
Maybe, but you’d need to wear on light boot and swap it between feet every half a pedal stroke, so possibly not that practical...So basically wear your steel toecapped work boots and you've upgraded 1000 Es?
cool!
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