Would my Turbo Levo be too slow on the road?

JayMartin

Member
May 26, 2021
45
28
Denver, CO USA
I have been thinking about buying a second set of wheels and a cassette to ride with a roadie friend. But do roadies ride faster than my cutout speed of 15.n mph?
Jay
 

Zimmerframe

MUPPET
Subscriber
Jun 12, 2019
14,044
20,840
Brittany, France
Yes. Generally considerably, even old ones. Though you might catch them on some steep climbs. With lighter tyres/wheels you should find it far easier to ride over the limit though.
 

galaga187

E*POWAH Master
Apr 15, 2018
806
605
Wroughton
Depends on the roadies fitness level and amount of climbing - I've just done 100 plus Miles with a group 5000ft climbing average speed 10.9 MPH 98% tarmac riding a levo with slicks.
 

Ark

Active member
Mar 8, 2023
464
391
Newcastle Upon Tyne
most people on gravel bikes/road bikes will be doing at least 18mph on flat ground.
you get some who just go at a leisurely pace of around 12-14mph but tends to be old, old, old people and the ones with panier racks traveling across a country
 

JayMartin

Member
May 26, 2021
45
28
Denver, CO USA
Yes. Generally considerably, even old ones. Though you might catch them on some steep climbs. With lighter tyres/wheels you should find it far easier to ride over the limit though.
I was thinking I was turning the motor when pedaling downhill and above the limit. The drag I felt couldn't be all tires could it?
 
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JayMartin

Member
May 26, 2021
45
28
Denver, CO USA
Depends on the roadies fitness level and amount of climbing - I've just done 100 plus Miles with a group 5000ft climbing average speed 10.9 MPH 98% tarmac riding a levo with slicks.
Those are mind-boggling statistics. Last week I rode 34 miles and ended with 9% battery. With the default assist settings, here are some of my statistics from Blevo:
37% Eco
56% Trail
7% Turbo
3,864 feet of climbing
This was all in the woods, no tarmac.
Are you carrying a 2nd battery? Are slicks that much more efficient? Do you have the assist turned down to next to nothing? I'm not at all doubting you; I would just like to understand what's accounting for this huge difference.
Thank you,
Jay
 

galaga187

E*POWAH Master
Apr 15, 2018
806
605
Wroughton
Those are mind-boggling statistics. Last week I rode 34 miles and ended with 9% battery. With the default assist settings, here are some of my statistics from Blevo:
37% Eco
56% Trail
7% Turbo
3,864 feet of climbing
This was all in the woods, no tarmac.
Are you carrying a 2nd battery? Are slicks that much more efficient? Do you have the assist turned down to next to nothing? I'm not at all doubting you; I would just like to understand what's accounting for this huge difference.
Thank you,
Jay
Sure - assistance turned down to Eco 15-30 and 30-60 Trail. Rode 700 WH battery down to 20% then switched to a 500 WH using 30% of that. We had serious headwinds and heavy rain. Main thing is high cadence and being light on pedals on climbs. Slicks make a massive difference.
 

MrSimmo

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Apr 24, 2020
1,096
1,047
The Trail.
+1 to derestricting it if youre riding with roadies. There’s no way I could keep up with my Schwarzenegger legged roadie friends on my (out of warranty) Levo if it turned into a dog at 15mph :D
 

Expidia

Well-known member
Jun 27, 2022
548
440
Capital Region, New York
Just buy a road bike used. They can be found on Craigs List or Facebook market place cheap. It’s not worth the hassle of changing your tires to slicks and then back again. An EMTB is not a road bike. Mine weigh 55 and 60 lbs and rolling is not a great characteristic of either of them due to weight, wide 2.4 tires and tread pattern.
“You can put lipstick on a pig, but it’s still a pig” 😜
 
Last edited:

JayMartin

Member
May 26, 2021
45
28
Denver, CO USA
Just buy a road bike used. They can be found on Craigs List or Facebook market place cheap. It’s not worth the hassle of changing your tires to slicks and then back again. An ETMB is not a road bike. Mine weight 55 and 60 lbs and rolling is not a great characteristic of either of them due to Weight, wide 2.4 tires and tread pattern.
“You can put lipstick on a pig but it’s still a pic” 😜
I was never thinking to swap tires between rides. Instead, I would get a spare set of wheels with narrower rims. However, I’m now wondering if the gotcha is the chainring. For example, some gravel bikes come with a 46T chainring while 36T is supposedly the largest that will fit on a Turbo Levo.
Are you suggesting a used e-assist road bike? Or buying a road bike and converting it to e-assist? Converting one myself would be new territory for me. If you are suggesting I just ride an analog road bike, I have my old Trek 730 hanging in the garage. But ever time I try to ride it I keep wondering if I have a flat or the wheel bearings have given out.
I appreciate everyone's comments.
Jay
 

JayMartin

Member
May 26, 2021
45
28
Denver, CO USA
Shouldn't your cut off speed be 20mph/32kph in the USA ?
Perhaps with the latest firmware upgrade that I had to go in for the other day. I was told it was too big to load over the air. Before that it seemed to cutout around 15.
Are you carrying your extra battery on your handlebars?
Jay
 

Zimmerframe

MUPPET
Subscriber
Jun 12, 2019
14,044
20,840
Brittany, France
Perhaps with the latest firmware upgrade that I had to go in for the other day. I was told it was too big to load over the air. Before that it seemed to cutout around 15.
Are you carrying your extra battery on your handlebars?
Jay
If it's in the shop ask them to check the region settings, it sounds like it's setup for EU not USA.

It was @galaga187 who did the 100+ Mile ride with the twin batteries. I'm normally dead after a max of 70 Miles on an EMTB (off road).
 

galaga187

E*POWAH Master
Apr 15, 2018
806
605
Wroughton
I was never thinking to swap tires between rides. Instead, I would get a spare set of wheels with narrower rims. However, I’m now wondering if the gotcha is the chainring. For example, some gravel bikes come with a 46T chainring while 36T is supposedly the largest that will fit on a Turbo Levo.
Are you suggesting a used e-assist road bike? Or buying a road bike and converting it to e-assist? Converting one myself would be new territory for me. If you are suggesting I just ride an analog road bike, I have my old Trek 730 hanging in the garage. But ever time I try to ride it I keep wondering if I have a flat or the wheel bearings have given out.
I appreciate everyone's comments.
Jay
I’d recommend getting a set of wheels and tyres as you first said and trying it out. Keeping up with my mates on flats was hard as I lost the two highest gears due to derailleur bent. Maybe get a mechanic to set up the two pairs of wheels so easy to change over
 

yorkshire89

E*POWAH Master
Sep 30, 2020
468
663
North Yorkshire
Even with a set of slicks you're going to be doing all the work after the cut off speed, which isn't much fun on a heavy full suspension.

What's your friends average pace on a ride? I'm usually averaging 18mph on an old road bike with a few small rolling hills (30ish miles). If there's a bit of a tailwind 25mph is doable and it could be 35mph+ on descents
 

galaga187

E*POWAH Master
Apr 15, 2018
806
605
Wroughton
Even with a set of slicks you're going to be doing all the work after the cut off speed, which isn't much fun on a heavy full suspension.

What's your friends average pace on a ride? I'm usually averaging 18mph on an old road bike with a few small rolling hills (30ish miles). If there's a bit of a tailwind 25mph is doable and it could be 35mph+ on descents
Good point - I checked the other riders (roadies) average times on Strava, my group were mostly 15 MPH Average
 

Plummet

Flash Git
Mar 16, 2023
1,152
1,635
New Zealand
You gearing is too low bike I's too heavy, motor had resistance and most of the time yourl be past the motor cut off.

Buy a second hand road bike and ride it. You can probably pick one up for less than the set of wheels and tires you are looking at.
 

Mabman

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Feb 28, 2018
1,126
1,856
Oregon USA
I've never owned a restricted bike and if I ever come across someone on the road I always offer to give them a pull. But pacelining and pelotoning makes me nervous and why I mainly ride off road.
 

Streddaz

Active member
Jul 7, 2022
306
438
Tasmania
I was never thinking to swap tires between rides. Instead, I would get a spare set of wheels with narrower rims. However, I’m now wondering if the gotcha is the chainring. For example, some gravel bikes come with a 46T chainring while 36T is supposedly the largest that will fit on a Turbo Levo.
Are you suggesting a used e-assist road bike? Or buying a road bike and converting it to e-assist? Converting one myself would be new territory for me. If you are suggesting I just ride an analog road bike, I have my old Trek 730 hanging in the garage. But ever time I try to ride it I keep wondering if I have a flat or the wheel bearings have given out.
I appreciate everyone's comments.
Jay
I have a Levo SL that I ride proper MTB trails on, but I also commute a 50km (31 mile) round trip to work as well. While I don't ride with roadies, I do manage to average around 26kph to 30kph (16mph to 18.5mph) during my flatish commute.
I do run Maxis Rexon Race for commuting and smoother trail riding and I to are looking at getting another set of wheels to build up for proper MTB duties.
What you will probably find is, on descents you will run out of gears, and as you said, you are unlikely to fit a big enough chain ring to match a road bike. You will smoke them on the steeper climbs though. I run a 32 tooth ring on the front and it's about a big as the SL will fit.
It will all depend on who you are riding with I suppose. You could just buy a Turbo Creo for road duties. :unsure:
 

Howz

Well-known member
Oct 12, 2019
421
484
Chester
Just de-restrict the motor and instal a larger front chainring and you’ll be fine.
Do this, on the road you are looking at around 18mph average, I’ve also got a 700w battery in my Levo and a trailwatts 252w battery as well so 952w total, 60 mile road trips no problem and could probably do 80 miles or more, I did used to have 2 sets of wheels and tyres, one set off road and one set for road…but in the end I now do more off road so I sold the other set.
 

JP-NZ

E*POWAH Elite
Feb 17, 2022
1,211
932
Christchurch - New Zealand
I ride my Rail on the road a lot always average around 18mph/28kph can easily spin up to the limiter at 20mph/32kph and hold it there.

My home city is very busy with cyclists. Roadies on the flat often pass me at I'd estimate at 22-25mph/35-40kph. I can't keep up with them unless it turns uphill. If I take my non E hardtail out I can easily ride at 20-22mph/32-35kph on the road for hours, bike does have slicks though :)
 

Alexbn921

Well-known member
Sep 27, 2021
545
512
East Bay CA
You would need to de-restrict, fit road style tires and put a bigger chainring on.
Even then you will get accelerated wear of the chain and cassette. Only using the small cogs on the rear wears them at a high rate.

A road style ebike should have a 50 front chainring.
 

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