I only use my motor maybe 20-30% of the time. Bike rides and handles so well on smoother, flowy trails, that I don't need or want it.I'm planning to replace my battery with same weight decoy battery just make sure I don't cheat when I go for these OFF rides.
I do the same on my sl ??30k loop today. Wherever I could I switched off. Surprisingly ok. Nothing to extreme obvs, makes ECO feel like turbo when you switch back on again. Good for fitness.
For me it's nice knowing it's there. Long climbs and longer rides aren't something I try to avoid knowing I have assistance if needed. At 65 I can ride as long as I want and if I start to tire then I have some assistance so I'm not completely gassed at the end of the day.Apart from riding with your kids etc why spend all that money on an ebike to not use it.
Due to heavy overnight rain I chose to ride roads only this morning and did 18 miles non stop hi cadence in eco. Still had a range of 14 miles left.
Eco doesn't even come close to levelling the playing field between an Ebike and a normal bike you'd have to be delusional to think it would.Went on a 40 mile ride today with my girlfriend and had it on eco mode as she’s on a non e bike so wanted to level the playing field. Im absolutely knackered. No way would I ride it ‘off’
Can't speak for other motors but yep agree, eco on the bosch cx gen4 is still a significant amount of assistance compared to a non ebikeEco doesn't even come close to levelling the playing field between an Ebike and a normal bike you'd have to be delusional to think it would.
Eco doesn't even come close to levelling the playing field between an Ebike and a normal bike you'd have to be delusional to think it would.
My point was you're not levelling the playing fields between the bikes though Tubby just the riders
I'm not judging you for your weight or lack of fitness simply stating the facts regarding the bikes. It's great that the Ebike can level out your lack of fitness with hers.
My GF is 70lb lighter than me and fit and rides a 27lb FS mtb. but I'm a lot stronger her and a far more experienced rider so an ebike switched off actually does level out our efforts when climbing. I still destroy her on the flat and DH. If I ride a normal bike with her I barely raise my HR the entire ride.
Even Eco low is still taking the piss compared to a normal bike Barber.
@Tubby G
I used to have 2 Emtbs as well. My GF doesn't really like riding them (too big n heavy to be fun basically). I have lots of normal bikes too, She has 3 so there are always plenty bikes for us to ride at mine or hers
Out of interest. How are you measuring the calories? I think I'd struggle to burn anywhere near 2600kcal on an Ebike ride. My longer offroad commute both ways is 40miles and a couple of thousand feet ascent and it burns less than 2000 even on a normal bike. I'm never hammering it though.
Ah... ok. your Edge 130 calories will probably be way off as as you say it doesn't know what assistance the motor is outputing.I have an Edge 130 on the bike to track the GPS but I don’t trust Strava’s calorie count on emtb setting as it doesn’t know what power mode you’re using so therefore cannot be accurate. I also have a Garmin Instinct watch. I just see how many calories I’ve burned on the watch without setting it to track the ride, as the watch also has HR monitor so is more accurate. I look at the calories burned before setting off, and how many at end of ride. Strangely, today, the calories matched Strava’s, but usually Strava is way off
Keep at it man. So long as you're enjoying it your fitness should return. The only thing I find Ebikes bad for fitness wise is top end efforts and sprints as it's harder to put in those with a moto. keeping riding normal bikes helps me with that.I lost all my fitness after having cancer and spending 3 years on chemo pills, it kind of wiped me out. I also stopped riding mtb’s and went for motorbikes instead. Having the ebikes means we can keep at the same pace regardless of fitness levels, and hopefully I’ll get fitter once again
Ah... ok. your Edge 130 calories will probably be way off as as you say it doesn't know what assistance the motor is outputing.
If you want to find a reasonably accurate calorie count for your rides with the Edge GPS you'd need to use a garmin ANT+ HR strap. and you also need to input your correct riding weight and HR zones into Garmin connect.
Strava's calorie count does a fairly decent guestimate based on the ride profile, bike and rider weight for normal bikes. but iobviously it won't be tracking any motor assistance data at all. It also doesn't take into account poor/difficult conditions or the extra effort of riding agressively etc unless combined with HR or power meter.
I don't know much about garmin watches or how accurate their calorie count may be. But I'd have thought they'd give a fairly good gauge combined with rider/bike weight and HR zones.
Keep at it man. So long as you're enjoying it your fitness should return. The only thing I find Ebikes bad for fitness wise is top end efforts and sprints as it's harder to put in those with a moto. keeping riding normal bikes helps me with that.
The World's largest electric mountain bike community.