Cleggy
Active member
Thanks for the input.
Right guys, back to spring weights.
I have a 450lb spring on my shock, its not easy to measure sag as the vernier can't fit in past the coils of the spring. But It appears that I am getting approx 3mm - 5mm more sag than the recommended 19mm.
From the few rides that I have done on the bike the 450lb spring feels great and I am not aware of having bottomed it out anywhere, however every single ride I am getting multiple pedal strikes.
Do I go a heavier spring? If so is 475lb enough or better to go 500lb?
Alternatively do I get 150mm crank arms instead of the 160mm?
I had the same issue (pedal strikes) on my non-e trail bike and adding more air in to the shock cured that.
I would be the first to admit my technique is not the best, and my lack of flexibility (too many years road cycling with ZERO muscle stretching pre or post ride) means its a struggle to drop the heels and keep them dropped.Queries about pedal strikes usually get the response that it's all about technique, and there's certainly some truth in that.
However, I think the BB on these bikes is pretty low compared to many others on the market. I was getting a few pedal strikes, but my main issue was bashing the motor and/or chainring on various obstacles. My solution was upping the fork to 170mm, putting on a 36T chainring (instead of the standard 38) and putting a 29" wheel on the back.
Obviously that's not the cheapest way of resolving the issue, but for the type of riding I do (which doesn't include much in the way of flow trails, where the low BB would help) I'm liking the way the bike rides and haven't yet had any pedal strikes or motor hits.
By upping the travel AND putting a 29 on the back, I'm keeping the geometry sort of the same(ish) - however, with a pretty slack head angle of 63 degrees as standard, just putting a 29 on the rear wouldn't make it too steep - may be worth a try?
We have like minds. I also bumped up my travel in the front to 170mm and i’m also using a 29” wheel with a 2.5 tire in the rear. I didn’t experience any additional pedal strikes with my E2 vs. my Turbo Levo (installed 155mm cranks).Queries about pedal strikes usually get the response that it's all about technique, and there's certainly some truth in that.
However, I think the BB on these bikes is pretty low compared to many others on the market. I was getting a few pedal strikes, but my main issue was bashing the motor and/or chainring on various obstacles. My solution was upping the fork to 170mm, putting on a 36T chainring (instead of the standard 38) and putting a 29" wheel on the back.
Obviously that's not the cheapest way of resolving the issue, but for the type of riding I do (which doesn't include much in the way of flow trails, where the low BB would help) I'm liking the way the bike rides and haven't yet had any pedal strikes or motor hits.
By upping the travel AND putting a 29 on the back, I'm keeping the geometry sort of the same(ish) - however, with a pretty slack head angle of 63 degrees as standard, just putting a 29 on the rear wouldn't make it too steep - may be worth a try?
As yet I have not added extra preload. (More preload would increase harshness wouldn't it?)Have you tried adjusting your shock with the spring you're using? Bit more preload should help with sag, bit more LSC damping should help keep the bike sitting up a bit more. Too heavy a spring and you'll struggle to use the travel and the bike may ride harshly.
Too much preload will make the shock feel harsh as it won't be sagged properly. It's not a great thing to adjust but it can make up for a little bit of sag.
Thanks, that one says 500lb spring. Notably this one tells you to adjust for heavier/lighter rider and to add 2% weight bias for recreational/beginner rider (which i class myself as) any other spring rate calculators ive seen do not go as fine grained as that.I use this spring calculator:
Mountain Bike Spring Rate Calculator I
It was spot on with the sag measurement and which spring rate I should use.
500lb spring at 24.9% sag
450lb spring (my current setup) at 27.7% sag
Thanks, that one says 500lb spring
old school measurement, had to stand on my mums scales as my digital ones that do lbs/kg have went awol, 14st 3 on hers. 25kg bike. +3kg for drinking water, helmet, shoes, body armourHow much do you weigh?
I've always tried to get about 30% sag on the rear, especially on an e-bike where pedalling efficiency isn't so important, so would have thought you'd be better with 450lb or less.
Did you measure the sag with the 500 spring?
Rotor magnet.
Looking for input from those who have used different wheels on their E1 / E2
Once you fit the magnet to the rotor on the alternative rear wheel, is there any setup you need to do within the controller and or the etube app? Or is it automatically detected and just works?
I'm curious to try a 29er rear wheel. Presumably I'd also have to change the millimeter wheel size somewhere too to keep the speed and distance accurate?
No setup required - it just works.
If you're putting a 29 on, then if you want accurate speed / odo then you'd need to get the wheel size adjusted on the motor software.
But I've left mine as it was - so at a real 25kmh (when the assistance cuts out) I'm actually doing 26.3km/h. I'm OK with that
I’m curious about something. I didn’t adjust any parameters to account for the 29 rear wheel I installed on my E2. Understanding the range reading is an estimate, would the 29 rear wheel give you more range or less?No setup required - it just works.
If you're putting a 29 on, then if you want accurate speed / odo then you'd need to get the wheel size adjusted on the motor software.
But I've left mine as it was - so at a real 25kmh (when the assistance cuts out) I'm actually doing 26.3km/h. I'm OK with that
same battery and motor so same range more or lessI’m curious about something. I didn’t adjust any parameters to account for the 29 rear wheel I installed on my E2. Understanding the range reading is an estimate, would the 29 rear wheel give you more range or less?
Maybe your buddy put in more effort so the bike didn't need to give as much assistance?Sorry didn’t mean to cause any confusion. I was just curious about it. I know there’s other factors to consider, but my buddy has the same exact bike as I do and we rode the same trail together last weekend and his range and battery level was more than what I had at the end of the ride. The only major difference between the two bikes was my 29” rear wheel. We both were on Eco the entire time and started off with the same battery level.
Congratulations. Ive had mine for 2 weeks and absolutely love it. I just bought 3m of 100mm Helitape off of ebay and cut lengths/widths and shapes to suit. I do this on all my bikes and the good quality tape stands the test of time at a fraction of the cost of branded tape.G’day! Managed to pick up a deal on a secondhand e2 recently, and am super stoked with this beast of a machine. It’s so much fun!
Got a couple newb questions tho…
…wondering if anyone here can recommend any frame protection kits, either full invisiframe or other…
…and whether transport on a folding arm bike rack is a good idea or not…as in, one like this where the bike sits atop the racks arms on it’s downtube. Have used this for years with analogue bikes and it’s bombproof, am loathe to change up, but the e2 battery sheath seems merely a flexible plastic cover and I’m wary of it on longer highway trips etc. Have seen a few threads already on here about racks and wet weather travel…thought I’d ask your opinions.
Cheers for your time, happy trails
Top tip Rich, cheers eh. Might give that a nudge, seems fiddly but…Congratulations. Ive had mine for 2 weeks and absolutely love it. I just bought 3m of 100mm Helitape off of ebay and cut lengths/widths and shapes to suit. I do this on all my bikes and the good quality tape stands the test of time at a fraction of the cost of branded tape.
Enjoy your riding
Rich
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