GL1
Member
Hi all,
So after 4000 miles of eBiking on two bikes (Levo and Kenevo) I have found that by far, one of my biggest issues is "premature" cog / cassette wear. I think the additional torque of the motor just wears them out much faster than they would with leg strength alone. I never had this occur (and certainly not at the intervals and skipping severity it's happening on the eMTB's) in thousands of miles and varying drivetrains when I was riding acoustic.
To be clear, on my 11 speed setups (both SRAM GX and Shimano XT,) the drivetrains hold up well for eMTB with the exception of the three to four highest (smallest) cogs on my cassettes. These tend to get "rounded" and begin skipping within 500-800 miles on a new GX, XT, or several other brand cassettes I have tried. And, the middle and upper speed cogs remain fine for many, many miles after that.
Has anyone else had this experience and / or found a good solution?
I am tired of spending the money to replace cassettes and then entire cassettes at that. I've been looking into just replacing the two to three lower cogs alone (those that are individual typically depending on the make of cassette.) I think I have found a place that sells them individually like that for 11 speed. Maybe titanium would hold up better if I can find them in that?
Anyway, let me know if you've had the issue and if you have a solution.
PS - As a side note, due to the increased torque I have also found the beauty of using "pinned" cassettes or at least pinned in part to save my alloy freehub bodies. In this way the majority of the cassette moves as one unit against the freehub body. The individual cog cassettes like SRAM GX just eat into the freehub bodies on the middle and upper cogs. The lower (smaller) cogs on any cassette are typically individual but have a wider base so they don't do this as much I've found. Anyway, just a side note on this topic as well.
So after 4000 miles of eBiking on two bikes (Levo and Kenevo) I have found that by far, one of my biggest issues is "premature" cog / cassette wear. I think the additional torque of the motor just wears them out much faster than they would with leg strength alone. I never had this occur (and certainly not at the intervals and skipping severity it's happening on the eMTB's) in thousands of miles and varying drivetrains when I was riding acoustic.
To be clear, on my 11 speed setups (both SRAM GX and Shimano XT,) the drivetrains hold up well for eMTB with the exception of the three to four highest (smallest) cogs on my cassettes. These tend to get "rounded" and begin skipping within 500-800 miles on a new GX, XT, or several other brand cassettes I have tried. And, the middle and upper speed cogs remain fine for many, many miles after that.
Has anyone else had this experience and / or found a good solution?
I am tired of spending the money to replace cassettes and then entire cassettes at that. I've been looking into just replacing the two to three lower cogs alone (those that are individual typically depending on the make of cassette.) I think I have found a place that sells them individually like that for 11 speed. Maybe titanium would hold up better if I can find them in that?
Anyway, let me know if you've had the issue and if you have a solution.
PS - As a side note, due to the increased torque I have also found the beauty of using "pinned" cassettes or at least pinned in part to save my alloy freehub bodies. In this way the majority of the cassette moves as one unit against the freehub body. The individual cog cassettes like SRAM GX just eat into the freehub bodies on the middle and upper cogs. The lower (smaller) cogs on any cassette are typically individual but have a wider base so they don't do this as much I've found. Anyway, just a side note on this topic as well.