CORC_Richard
New Member
Just got my Orbea Rise M20 and went out today for the first ride. Covered 40km and 550m of ascent over two hours. Used Trail and Boost (I know, but wanted to have some fun on the new bike!) and still only got through a third of the battery.
I swapped the handle bar for a Race Face Next 20mm carbon riser, partly to get the overall weight down, but the biggest advantage is how light it makes the steering feel. Well worth the upgrade (£108). It also reduces the handlebar width to 760mm (or a metal saw could achieve the same) which suits me better at 5'7".
I've setup the RISE RS toolbox through my Garmin 530 and use the 7-B screen layout which means in the largest field box I can see the assist mode and battery percentage on the Garmin screen leaving the other six fields for my preferred data (time, distance, ascent, temp, HR, ride time). I prefer this to the eBike Shimano data fields as the assist mode shows up in English rather than a number. Also using this I no longer want the E7000 display as the Garmin shows me what I need. Wondering if I could even get rid of the small indicator box as well and just run the switch onto the cable into the down tube?
It was a muddy day today and the Mudhugger front guard worked fine, but have ordered another one to go on the rear. A great deal of mud went over the rear linkage, motor and charger connector port which I doubt is ideal long term.
Forks front and back felt right for me and the type of riding I do (mostly trails / XC) so doubt I will change. Going on a trip to the Alps next year so will think about swapping front rotor to IceTech Freeza 203mm for the long decents, but the 180mm is fine for Kent/Surrey Hills rides, even though I did get a nice burning smell of the front rotor today on a longer fast decent, but that may just be burning off the factory coating.
Overall very very happy with the bike and grateful to this forum for the many comments others have left.
Richard
I swapped the handle bar for a Race Face Next 20mm carbon riser, partly to get the overall weight down, but the biggest advantage is how light it makes the steering feel. Well worth the upgrade (£108). It also reduces the handlebar width to 760mm (or a metal saw could achieve the same) which suits me better at 5'7".
I've setup the RISE RS toolbox through my Garmin 530 and use the 7-B screen layout which means in the largest field box I can see the assist mode and battery percentage on the Garmin screen leaving the other six fields for my preferred data (time, distance, ascent, temp, HR, ride time). I prefer this to the eBike Shimano data fields as the assist mode shows up in English rather than a number. Also using this I no longer want the E7000 display as the Garmin shows me what I need. Wondering if I could even get rid of the small indicator box as well and just run the switch onto the cable into the down tube?
It was a muddy day today and the Mudhugger front guard worked fine, but have ordered another one to go on the rear. A great deal of mud went over the rear linkage, motor and charger connector port which I doubt is ideal long term.
Forks front and back felt right for me and the type of riding I do (mostly trails / XC) so doubt I will change. Going on a trip to the Alps next year so will think about swapping front rotor to IceTech Freeza 203mm for the long decents, but the 180mm is fine for Kent/Surrey Hills rides, even though I did get a nice burning smell of the front rotor today on a longer fast decent, but that may just be burning off the factory coating.
Overall very very happy with the bike and grateful to this forum for the many comments others have left.
Richard