Newish-bie...... Now bikeless. *** UPDATE ***

Major Stare

Active member
May 5, 2021
131
193
Nottinghamshire
Had my Cube Stereo Hybrid 625 for just over a year and sold it last week.
As confidence has grown on the trails and rides I found I needed an upgrade (and the medium frame was a little small in the cockpit).

So now I'm bikeless.

I have looked at the usual brands.... Trek, Specialised etc but I keep being drawn to the following....
Nukeproof Megawatt 297 Comp - £4,500
Focus Jam Squared 6.8 - £4,600
Vitus e-sommet 297 vrs - £4,300

Which would you choose of those 3?
Buying blind as non available to view within 100miles.
 

Bummers

Well-known member
Mar 12, 2022
584
539
UK
All capable bikes but I'd be looking at the spec lists and seeing which has the better suspension.
 

Expidia

Well-known member
Jun 27, 2022
548
440
Capital Region, New York
If you can't find any specific reasons to choose from specs and reviews, buy the one with the closest dealer!
This is a great point Steve makes here about the closet dealer. I'll also add an "ebike qualified" dealer. From reading various threads in this forum even though ebike issues may be few and far between if it happens to you (error codes, bad motor etc) it's not just the one trip back to the dealer . . . it may turn into many back (and forth trips) after you leave it there for a warranty (or any repair) then have to go back again to pick it up and that's if you are lucky and they fixed your issue the first time. Ebikes are also a new technology to most repair shops. Some parts, warranty or not, are taking many weeks now. I'm starting my 3rd week just waiting for a shorter stem from Bontrager.

* Also, after reading a horror story thread of a member here that left his bike at a shop and they were robbed of 12 bikes including his. Last I read he was still fighting with the shop to replace his bike at full value. And if that happened to me my particular model was not available within a 250 mile radius of my house other than the one I found. This is why I prefer to learn how to repair or upgrade myself, without leaving my bike at a shop 😱 if at all possible.

I traveled 2 hours (4 hrs round trip) a few months back, to pick up my new Trek at a Trek store. Upon bringing it home, I also have one qualified Trek shop 2 miles from me and another 30 min north of my house ( Both did not have my model in stock) I paid MSRP anyway, so I would have rather bought locally. Even so, they can do any potential warranty work for me locally now.
 

Expidia

Well-known member
Jun 27, 2022
548
440
Capital Region, New York
Dont discount a giant stance the yamaha is a good motor too
I also have a 2nd ebike a 2021 Giant Explore with the 80Nm Yamaha. It is overall quieter than the 2022 Trek 85Nm Bosch Performance CX. But the Yamaha when in eMTB mode and in a certain gear has a nuts and bolts rattle sound which is annoying. But the Yamaha tops out smoothly at 28 mph with a very smooth handoff to peddle power after 28 mph.

The Bosch motor tops out at 20 mph and sarting at around 18 mph it's like a "heart punch" with the handoff and insant drop in power at 20 mph. Thats my biggest complaint with Bosch that their power hand off sucks!

Since I'm stuck with Bosch's 20 mph speed limit, if I read that the new Trek Fuel light weight bike does not have that hand off issue anymore . . . I would probably sell the 2022 Powerfly and go for the Fuel, but not until they pump up the Nm's and the battery life from where it currently is now.
 

Major Stare

Active member
May 5, 2021
131
193
Nottinghamshire
Nipped i to a well known and respected bike shop today. They had two Vitus in for a service. Nice bikes and decnet spec but for some reason i wasnt drawn to them enough to buy one, so thats off the list.
Bike shop said all three were good bikes, the Focus would suit my needs better than the Nukeproof.
So, it looks like the Focus🤔
 

Bomble

Well-known member
Nov 11, 2018
661
386
Yorkshire
I would be a bit wary of buying a Shimano powered bike second hand as I don’t think the motors are repairable out of warranty by the usual companies.
 

2WheelsNot4

E*POWAH Master
Oct 17, 2021
918
712
Scotland
Not just the sus bits. I'd look towards the motor too.

Nukeproof Megawatt 297 Comp - Smaller 504wh batt, not so great shimano motor, good shock, basic domain fork, though it is a 38mm.
Focus Jam2 6.8 - Bosch motor, 625wh batt, fox 34/dps
Vitus e-sommet 297 vrs - nice everything except for the shimano motor, so maybe longevity might be an issue.

Its a bastard of a choice this choosing business. Glad im over my brain flummoxing horror show.
 

RustyMTB

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Jul 22, 2020
2,850
6,892
UK
Tip for the Jam, ride it fast downhill & satisfy yourself it's stable enough for you. It has a relatively short wheelbase & can feel twitchy depending on your attitude.
 

RustyMTB

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Jul 22, 2020
2,850
6,892
UK
Great choice. This will be you in no time.

FYnwfGPXEAMHolC.jpg
 

Zimmerframe

MUPPET
Subscriber
Jun 12, 2019
14,028
20,817
Brittany, France
I also have a 2nd ebike a 2021 Giant Explore with the 80Nm Yamaha. It is overall quieter than the 2022 Trek 85Nm Bosch Performance CX. But the Yamaha when in eMTB mode and in a certain gear has a nuts and bolts rattle sound which is annoying. But the Yamaha tops out smoothly at 28 mph with a very smooth handoff to peddle power after 28 mph.

The Bosch motor tops out at 20 mph and sarting at around 18 mph it's like a "heart punch" with the handoff and insant drop in power at 20 mph. Thats my biggest complaint with Bosch that their power hand off sucks!

Since I'm stuck with Bosch's 20 mph speed limit
To be fair, you're not stuck with "Bosch's" 20 mph speed limit. It's the Legal limit for any of the motors as a pedelec.

Your Giant/Yamaha must be a speed pedelec, so complys to different legalisation which then normally requires a licence place and insurance to be legal to use on the road.

If you're only riding on private land, you could de-restrict your Bosch and have a similar or higher cut off.

I'm not quite sure I understand your "heart punch" handoff comment ?????? As you say, the bosch starts to reduce assistance at around 18mph and then slowly and gently reduces the assistance over 2 mph until it cuts off completely. It's the smoothest handover of any of the motors and because of the steady transition, the easiest to continue to pedal over the assistance because your body has time to compensate, rather than the sudden ON/OFF which the others motors provide.

If you're finding the the Giant to be easier at 28mph without assistance, where there's considerably more rolling resistance than at 20mph, then logically that must just mean that your giant has very low resistance tyres (no grip and light weight) Whilst your bosch bike must have high resistance tyres (lots of grip and heavy). Pedaling the bike above the assistance limit has no bearing on the motor, only the configuration of your bike.
 
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