Pff, got around just today thank you very much! Still didn't notice any rattle, unless you mean a typical electric motor whine.Great. Let us know when you get round to riding your bike
Pff, got around just today thank you very much! Still didn't notice any rattle, unless you mean a typical electric motor whine.Great. Let us know when you get round to riding your bike
Pffft. Amateurs. I can do that without overrun.Brose torque sensor failures where overrun went to 1.5-2 seconds and countless people's horror stories of being nearly taken to their deaths over cliffs and into trees.
This isn't really a very good example.This is not new - they have done it many times on motorcycle bikes/engines.
In 1999 I got the Yamaha OW02 - it's produced in very limited numbers, lighter, more powerfull, made for racing, very bad maintenance scheme and extremely expensive.
It's not so much more power as a change in the way the power is delivered.
Can’t get anywhere near it at the moment. I’ve tried!it seems that the Gen 3 Levo can be tuned similarly to the Bosch "Race" motor
For starters the OW02, whilst stunning, wasn't lighter or more powerful. It was actually homologated to comply with the German 100hp limit, so it was actually heavily de-tuned with the knowledge that anyone buying it would re-build the motor with higher spec components to get the race performance required (unless you forgot the change the cams, then they failed). Agreed, it was extremely expensive though !
By "chosen" do you mean anyone who choses to buy any of the production bikes fitted with the motor? I'm sure Whyte won't be the only ones.only for chosens ....
Mondraker Crafty too to my certain knowledge.By "chosen" do you mean anyone who choses to buy any of the production bikes fitted with the motor? I'm sure Whyte won't be the only ones.
So presumably a software update could allow race mode to be implemented on any regular CX?
Personally I really dislike any sort of overrun, I like my motor to replicate how a normal bike behaves as I swap between regular and EMTB a fair bit, and every time I ride a Bosch it catches me out, however thats likely because I dont ride them day in and day out.
Can’t get anywhere near it at the moment. I’ve tried!
The Brose has a distinct lag in crank to power; especially on the very first small rotation of the pedal - it takes a slight crank rotation to get going. Bosch is instant.
You’ll only really notice if you ride both a lot and on steep uphill techy climbs.
No way to get a similar feel of instant support. No way to get similar level of predictable over run.
it’s massively noticeable in technical climbs, and starting from very steep sections.
bosch sensor technology is quicker, and the motor is more predictable.
I also think Specialized have detuned the initial power on the initial pedal rotation and I suspect it’s to protect the belts at low cadences.
I’ve tried so much to get my 2022 Kenevo to perform like the Bosch, but it’s impossible.
Brose does have an advantage of no ratchet points in the motor though, so the gearing engages quicker. But this doesn’t make up for the slight lag in electrical power being applied.
A bad comparison, but how I can describe it, is that Brose feels more like a diesel engine. Bosch like a Tesla.
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A lot of people will probably buy this wanting the Fastest, latest and greatest, but as the video's say, unless you're a great rider, you won't be able to use the extra features to your advantage.
- Full Turbo 400% for 1.5 seconds and trying to upshift without destroying chains and cassettes.
It's an interesting and fun development of the CX, but in the hands of most of us muppets, it would be wasted/abused.
I have seen a report from a german review pointing out as one of the main changes is that the CX Race is optimized for Higher Cadence Ranges, possible to give decent support upwards of 120rpm range.
If that is true and the fact that Bosch didn't want to spit out anything about the internal changes of the motor, that tells to me, that they had to implement some internal motor gearing changes to make that possible.
As internal gearing is the main limiting factor(due to space constrains)for good support in higher cadences in today's motors.
The CX Performance Gen4 is optimized to 80rpm as far as I know.
If the Race has this limit higher in the 90rpm's range, that would be something radically new that none of the other players have and would mean a significant advantage on really steep climbs where high cadence(low gears/big sprockets) is used.
With a higher cadence optimized motor you don't loose the torque levels as fast as you would with one that is optimized for lower cadences.
I think the future of ebike mtb motors should go into making motors optimized for higher cadences and tuning different modes according to the usual average cadence used in that specific mode.
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I am aware of the cassette/chainring gearing and how your example gets you up almost anything, but in racing it's how fast it gets u up anything what matters.The Levo is optimized for 85, FWIW. Given that you really don't need big gears for downhills, the low gears are already pretty low on a lot of eMTBs with 12 speed rear cassettes. A 32-52 with 400% boost is gonna get you up just about anything that the laws of physics would let you get up.
I am aware of the cassette/chainring gearing and how your example gets you up almost anything, but in racing it's how fast it gets u up anything what matters.
I am not talking about cassette/chainring gearing, but about motor internal gearing that down-gears your input cadence to an reasonable rpm for the electric motor inside that then does not need to spin to fast, as when it spins to fast the torque decreases pretty fast what you can see nicely in the attached graphics...not sure where exactly the graphics are from found them on the forums, but for example purposes they are quite clear, you can see the relation of torque/power to cadence.
View attachment 98220
Now imagine a motor that has the ideal cadence range shifted higher into the low 100s.
Don't know how often you follow your cadence when climbing physics possible climbs in the 32-52 combo?
I do and my best possible combo is 36-51 and my cadence is way over 100rpm...so yours is even higher with the lower combo...now if you check where the torque is at those higher cadences you can see that a motor optimized for higher cadences has an advantage in power and torque at given cadence. Time will tell if the CX Race really has new guts inside. Definitely hope so as I think this is what the emtb motors are missing, higher cadence support.
A good example of this kind of thinking is the R&D of the new TQ HPR50 where because of no multiple gears inside, they didn't have this limitation and at their testing they found out that riders sometimes with short half stroke pedaling reach cadences north of 140rpm so they optimized their motor much higher because of the design they could.
The classic motor design with multiple gears have some limitations because of the space constrain.
Well so much from me...✌ happy riding
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