This is quite true. When I bought my 2018 levo I also bought a specialized traverse SL 29 wheel set with an aluminum free hub and the individual cassette gears have gouged divots out of the aluminum free hub where are each individual gear in the cassette engages the grooves of the free hub. Sure enough the free hub body on the OEM rear wheel is steel when I put a magnet on it. Since then I have filed down all of the gouges and the free hub still works but I am being a lot more careful with shifting under load.Maybe check yhe freehub type. You need a better freehub for ebiking, steel is better than aluminium? More power means the cassette digs into the aluminium?
I totally agree with this one. Alloy bodys suck in general, on ebikes I need steel. That's the main advantage of getting an ebike specific wheelset, or rear wheel, they're usually steel bodied.Maybe check yhe freehub type. You need a better freehub for ebiking, steel is better than aluminium? More power means the cassette digs into the aluminium?
No it doesn't Tim.On a 30lb fully suspended bike when you pre hop something and come up short the bike has no or virtually no human load on it as your body is in a hopped neutral state. Or your body weight isn’t on the bike, so when you wheel tap that square edge rock curb etc the wheel has the force of a 30lb bike on it.
Well when your in the same state the wheel now has a 50+ lbs weight on it.
Sorry? but what does this actually mean?Fact, i have 133 combine world titles, world records and world championships to my companies name and list of achievements.
Well done.2- i have won every mountain bike race i have intered in last year,
Who?3 work closely with 3 top EWS riders who are finishing in top 10 in there second year pro.
and you accuse me of bragging? Ok.4- have a degree in engineering and have more money in test equipment then you have prob made in your life time.
What?5- i don’t watch what people did, do or once did and make statements as to what people do works or call that proof!
I actually have but don't let that get in the way.6- you have no credentials to your name and have never worked with or for any factory or privateer race team.
i was told you couldn’t argue with stupid, i see now that is sound advice.Sorry? but what does this actually mean?
And how are you claiming it's your list of achievements?
Well done.
but...
What races?
Where?
What class?
Who?
and you accuse me of bragging? Ok.
What?
I actually have but don't let that get in the way.
I understand perfectly well how to use a small hit to create pop.
But...
Newsflash: Not "tapping" rocks so hard your rim breaks is a skill required to finish an enduro race. Finishing stages is kinda a big deal for the overall.
I'm fairly confident the entire top ten EWS guys would agree.
Heavy/Clumsy/Rad comes into play again.
Forgeting calculations for a minute. The average Emtb rider does not need any higher level of strength in their wheels than they would riding a regular Enduro bike. A decently strong ~500g Alu rim, decent spoke count (32), good wheel build and appropriate tyre sidewalls and pressures is all that's required.
The average Emtb rider is also never going to race an EWS or WC DH.
We already have rims strong enough for both those competitions (and stronger than the average Emtb rider really needs)
That's my entire point here.
You going on about how many rims you (intentionally?) destroy with your state of the art "testing" lab is sort of irrelevant to the average Emtb rider.
I was
i was told you couldn’t argue with stupid, i see now that is sound advice.
For your handy capped acceptance criteria.
What does accredited world championship mean? It means i either built, designed and built the power plant- vehicle or was the athlete behind them !
You say the average ebike rider doesn’t need a stronger wheel.
You have a heavier bike by 30% and you don’t think the bike would become more responsive with a more rigid wheel assembly.
But you haven’t tested it so again you speak out of place.
Well here a news flash, the 2018-19 Fantic has been criticized and given low test results because of its wheel and tire combo!
If they didn’t matter why the test results from a wide range of riders rate the bike so low?
The average rider doesn’t need according to you.
But none of the test results agree with you.
Now for facts you never asked or considered.
I have broken or damaged 60% of my wheels in corners with over 30psi pressure. So according to your logic i need to develop skill to bunny hop corners.
Then let’s beat your logic into the ground.
Schwalbe designed a ebike specific tire, what’s different about the tire?? It’s between a DD case and DH case has tread that are double if not triple wide and it’s designed for the average ebike rider. If average rider doesn’t need stiffer why such a heavy case at 1300g
Are you starting to see the pattern in your logic yet??
Of course your not because it’s clearly not the logical path you been speaking.
Do you need a higher strength wheel, well to be honest we don’t need a bike, or an ebike if we want to use your negative logic.
But having replaced wheelset on some ebikes even novice/ just over beginner level riders claim to like the stronger wheel and no one wanted to ride the stock wheel set or preferred it over the stronger wheel sets.
As for me I’m done arguing with you as all i want to do is hold your head in toilet
Readers be ware, Gary is not an expert, he is a seasoned bike rider with a very narrow window of real world testing and one to ride any setup and adapt to its traits and then call them viable.
If it’s not his idea or belief your just wrong.
Example, every ebike that has a top rating has a 35mm or wider internal width rim. Gary says you don’t need wider or stronger rims, as he rides 30’s or narrower rims with 2.3 tires.
But yet no ebike has gotten above a marginal review with wheels under 35 internal and tires smaller then 2.5.
So every single ebike test in last year doesn’t agree with Gary and his setup
He also will spout out your wrong but has no data to back his harsh disagreement.
If your going to say someone is wrong!! You need facts to make that statement.
If you want to disagree with someone then you can state your opinion.
When you say someone doesn’t know how to ride based on fact he broke a wheel or they need more skill. Again speaking out of place. Proper response would be to question where and how they broke rim. I didn’t flat, i didn’t cut sidewall on a evo case tire but broke a rim. ( rolling alum bead edges inward, braking carbon bead edges off) but wheel is still true on the unbroken side. So please explain to your followers the Gary logic how learning to bunny hop a corner will stop you from wheel damage and improve your riding.
So I’m now going to leave EMT, people like Gary make it not worth my time to post about testing and development we been doing.
The moderators will allow people like Gary to badger and argue every single person who comes in here with his your wrong, u an idiot, lean to ride! only what i do is right attitude and he never once has any facts to back up his badgering disagreements.
Enjoy EMT readers. Peace out.
I tend to agree about that EMTB gimmick and then up the prize 30%. However I have found that especially rear hubs live a hard life on an EMTB as the extra power from a motor sure put extra strength on stuff.My personal experience and opinion is the same as Gary’s. I need a wheel set which is appropriate for the total weight and riding style regardless of the bike type.
I’m swapping wheel sets between my bikes - regular and ebike - and none of them are ‘ebike specific’. The most used set on my ebike is with Hope Pro 4 hubs and 80€ Spank Oozy Trail rims and I found them absolutely bomb proof. Same with the other, DT350/Spank Oozy combo. After 4000km I’m yet to find a reason to buy anything ‘ebike specific’ for my Meta.
I have no experience with those but the axle shouldn’t bend after 100km regardless of the bike. Many ebikes are coming with cheap Shimano hubs and they last longer than that one.I tend to agree about that EMTB gimmick and then up the prize 30%. However I have found that especially rear hubs live a hard life on an EMTB as the extra power from a motor sure put extra strength on stuff.
This is the freewheel/axle from a Novatec D412 hub and by no means super high tech but considered a strong hub, on my Levo it lasted less than 100 km before the freewheel looked like this and the axle bend so much that the rear cassette was wobbling in a way that gave continuous ghost shifting in all gears.
View attachment 12095
View attachment 12096
Karsten
why such a heavy case at 1300g
(rolling alum bead edges inward, braking carbon bead edges off) but wheel is still true on the unbroken side.
Re the escalation, I always think of forums as like being in the pub, you will always disagree with someone but you can't just shout them down as you know it won't end well. Very rarely do you or your adversary resort to personal insults or a full on punch up, you just ignore each other & get on with your life, probably the best thing to do in this case as both make valid points IMO*.
* I avoid like the plague forums about what I work with as although I have over 30 years of experience in what I do there will ALWAYS be someone who thinks they know better & want to argue it, sometimes being the better man & not arguing is the way forward
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