Ive been into 2 shops that sold bikes with a SRAM motor. At both shops i knew the employees.. i got around to asking "so can i give a bike with this new.motor a spin?"Does SRAM use brose motor?
Is it reliable?
Is there any mechanical breakdown in first year?
Thanks for the feedbackIve been into 2 shops that sold bikes with a SRAM motor. At both shops i knew the employees.. i got around to asking "so can i give a bike with this new.motor a spin?"
Shop 1- " errrr, um no... sorry... its broken"
Me-" its broken? How long did that take!?"
Them- " we built the bike, the motor crapped out on a test ride in the parking lot, it's getting warrantied"
Shop #2
Me- " anybody tried out that SRAM motor yet??"
Bike shop- " all the mechanics sheepishly look at each other"
Me- " not so great???"
Them- " its getting warrantied "
Thats the only real world feed back ive got...
Yes, I agree. But I would rather not have to use it.I guess that's why you have a warranty on new stuff
Just for my understanding, the SRAM is a Brose Mag S which is the same as the specialized 2.2 no? Firmware might varies that said, especially with SRAM. Maybe the 2.1 was a bit different I do not recall.I have the Transition Repeater PT with SRAM motor, its amazing, better than the Brosch on my Turbo Levo.
For tech climbs it gives you an extra push , which makes a big difference between making or not making the obstacle, its quieter too.
Pretty happy with it.
I also have the Turbo Levo with Brose motor, 2.2 , has the same amount of power as the SRAM , but with the SRAM you get extra push for a few more seconds when you stop pedaling, which dramatically helps on technical climbs, there is a pretty technical climb that with the Turbo Levo I need to get off the bike 5 times on steep roots or rocks I cannot make, on the very first ride on the Transition I only had to get off the bike once, and this has been repeatedly the case on techy climbs, for the rest is the same, just quieter.Just for my understanding, the SRAM is a Brose Mag S which is the same as the specialized 2.2 no? Firmware might varies that said, especially with SRAM. Maybe the 2.1 was a bit different I do not recall.
If these 2 Seconds instead of stopping are pushing you out of the trail down in the Cliff, you are dead.I also have the Turbo Levo with Brose motor, 2.2 , has the same amount of power as the SRAM , but with the SRAM you get extra push for a few more seconds when you stop pedaling, which dramatically helps on technical climbs, there is a pretty technical climb that with the Turbo Levo I need to get off the bike 5 times on steep roots or rocks I cannot make, on the very first ride on the Transition I only had to get off the bike once, and this has been repeatedly the case on techy climbs, for the rest is the same, just quieter.
Agree with that.If these 2 Seconds instead of stopping are pushing you out of the trail down in the Cliff, you are dead.
I agree, I would have had the brake lightly applied to hold me there, but not full on! An unexpected shove may overwhelm the application.But when you want to stop you hit the brake no? I think I am always hitting the brake no matter what I do because if I do not pedal the bike have still momentum even on steep climb unless you are really really slow and with maxgrip.
After thinking about it, I'm sure it was.Hmm this seems a bit different that remaining boost after pedal, If you break, stop the bike and then by error apply pressure too much on the pedal, the motor could engage.
Is it what you felt @steve_sordy ?
It’s called overrun and most modern motors have it. Some configurable, some not. It’s a GREAT feature for technical climbs and you get used to it pretty quickly. It’s very manageable and I never had the feeling of getting pushed to hard.But when you want to stop you hit the brake no? I think I am always hitting the brake no matter what I do because if I do not pedal the bike have still momentum even on steep climb unless you are really really slow and with maxgrip.
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