Trek Fuel EXe vs Cannondale Moterra SL

Voltameter

New Member
Jan 8, 2025
1
0
Castlegar , BC
Hello,

I'm in need of and eMTB now that I am disabled with Long-COVID and recovering. This means my body has trouble producing energy and if I over-exert I get sick for a week, but if I manage my energy right I think I could be doing some short-ish eMTB rides this year. Right now in my recovery I can do around 1.5hr of light exertion (Heart Rate under 120bpm).

My background is years of racing enduro, riding the gnarliest shit around, and huge missions. Obviously things are gonna have to change; shorter rides, less aggressive. Before I got sick I was riding a Pivot Firebird and a Chromag Stylus.

My LBS stocks Trek and I've been looking at the Fuel EXe that I would extend the fork to 160mm and probably size up on. I know with this bike I won't be flying blindly into chunder, but can it handle aggressive terrain? Another bike I'm looking at is a demo Cannondale Moterra SL. I'm leaning towards the Fuel because I don't need much range, will be riding with my analog bros, and I'll have LBS support. But the Cannodale is cheaper (demo with warranty) and would offer more assist for my disability.

Can anyone offer me their experience with these bikes and which would best fit my unique needs?
 

Twisted Fork

Member
Nov 1, 2022
48
70
British Columbia, Canada
Because the ex-e forces you to put in a lot more effort and higher cadence to get the most return from the system, it may not be the best choice for you at this point in your recovery. I’ll regularly hit 170+ bpm still while climbing in moderate to steep single track. Keeping under 120 would be difficult in many situations. You’ll probably want a motor that has higher torque output at lower cadences, like a Yamaha or Bosch.

It’s a very capable and lively descender, especially with a 160mm fork in mullet configuration.
 

Mteam

E*POWAH Elite
Aug 3, 2020
1,913
1,847
gone
Dont worry about whether the Exe can handle the terrain, it'll handle pretty much anything you would have ridden on your previous bikes - maybe slightly slower ,due to a bit less travel at the back, but not by much. The bike itself is very capable, especially if you use a 160mm fork, and some people use a 62.5mm stroke shock to gain an extra 5mm of travel on the rear.

If you're always riding with people on regular bikes, then the TQ motor will do what you need - ie keep your heart rate down and give you a whole load of range, its only when your speed increases to beyond normal bike speeds that the battery consumption increases significantly.

I havent ridden the cannondale, but it does look really good, full power in a lightweight package, it gets decent reviews. Maybe its the better bike of the two?
 

Kubiertas

New Member
Oct 18, 2024
10
9
Netherlands
Hey @Voltameter I also suffer from long-covid. A little more than three years now.
I uses to ride a niner rkt rdo. So mostly cross country here in the flat Netherlands.
I love my fuel exe. Should have bought it earlier. But I thought I could recover faster.
I went over my limits to easy when riding my analog bike. I just ended up trying to ride the way I was used to. And then a couple of days later the punnisher walked in…..

So sorry, our use cases are not comparable. But I am very happy with my fuel ex-e. More than enough power for me. (I’m a very big guy)
 

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