HarveyMiller
Member
I not only would ride it but I purchased it. been out with it now five times and it is an absolute Joy.
Very expen$$$ive this spez. A road bike is in general a light /fast bike. Only see advantages in rides with lots of moutain rods.
Maybe because there is no one to police the speed limits. Do we really want trail police or speed cameras to to fine us on trials?Harvey congratulations you inspire me. Sounds like you are having a blast. Ride Safe!
I can't wait to try one. I'm still riding my light carbon roadie in between emtb rides and love the speed while pushing my heart rate for sustained road bike work outs. However, the restricted speed on any ebike in particular a Creo is absolutely ridiculous. When I can hit faster speeds on my analogue bike why pay 10,000 for bike with stupid nanny restrictions. Yeah I know the climbing! Think about it ... tons of cars and motorcycles on the road can do 300+ kph, many trucks can do 160+ kph and they all can inflict infinitely more damage in the hands of a reckless and irresponsible driver. But they aren't restricted. So why pick on ebikes with draconian restrictions? It all has to be common sense ride/drive at a safe speed for the road/trail and traffic conditions and don't put others at risk. Follow speed limits and just be a courteous rider/driver. For my EMTB I don't care as I rarely am going fast but for the Creo I'm going to want to access its speed potential in the flats beyond my analogue bike. Can't wait to try one. I'll likely buy one as long as the nanny shit can be turned off without voiding a warranty. Love all the new toys being developed for us.
On the road I understand but you have to draw the line somewhere. People will just abuse it cause they can. Personally more than 25km on an actual bush trail is more than enough.Christian believe it or not we do have police showing up on our busiest trails to ensure ebikers are not breaking our 32 k limits. I'm fine with that. As you likely are aware the home builders are building some pretty fast ebikes and a busy trail is not the place for them to test speed. They are welcome on the roads as long as they follow traffic rules as motorcyclists do. Fortunately for us we have hundreds of kms of dedicated bike lanes in Victoria BC. It is very easy to get to 40-45 kms solo on our road bikes and higher in a peloton in these safe dedicated lanes. This is why having a restricted CREO makes little sense.
We should pole road bike riders with e bike experience concerning the Creo nanny factor. Think if it wasn't there, there would be way more interest
I get what your saying but if the bike could hit 40 or 50km/h people will just abuse that on the trails and end up hurting people.Hey just a clarification they only show up on our major high traffic trails which are multi use, walking, running, biking lanes. These are wide like a one lane road, some areas made out of an old railway bed so flat, open and wide but usually too busy to be going very fast. They don't show up on any bush or serious MTB trails. Most of our trails are technical with lots of roots and rock so speeds are relatively low anyway. i
Regarding road biking, Victoria is the national training center for our Canadian athletes as its the one part of Canada that rarely gets snow so you can (e)bike here year round. Tons of bike lanes and great roads with undulating terrain. Road biking is very popular. So seeing pelotons and road bike riders ripping by at high speeds is very common in our local area. I would need a Creo that can stay with the pack. 32km limit ain't gonna come close so why this restriction kills the viability of this bike. If the motor won't turn on I don't want to haul an extra 15 lbs of bike along with me to try and ride with my friends.
Cheers
Harvey congratulations you inspire me. Sounds like you are having a blast. Ride Safe!
I can't wait to try one. I'm still riding my light carbon roadie in between emtb rides and love the speed while pushing my heart rate for sustained road bike work outs. However, the restricted speed on any ebike in particular a Creo is absolutely ridiculous. When I can hit faster speeds on my analogue bike why pay 10,000 for bike with stupid nanny restrictions. Yeah I know the climbing! Think about it ... tons of cars and motorcycles on the road can do 300+ kph, many trucks can do 160+ kph and they all can inflict infinitely more damage in the hands of a reckless and irresponsible driver. But they aren't restricted. So why pick on ebikes with draconian restrictions? It all has to be common sense ride/drive at a safe speed for the road/trail and traffic conditions and don't put others at risk. Follow speed limits and just be a courteous rider/driver. For my EMTB I don't care as I rarely am going fast but for the Creo I'm going to want to access its speed potential in the flats beyond my analogue bike. Can't wait to try one. I'll likely buy one as long as the nanny shit can be turned off without voiding a warranty. Love all the new toys being developed for us.
Note that the US version which is what I got has a Assisted speed to 28 miles an hour which is 45 km per hour.
On a Creo I would imagine you would get less than an hour of ride time at that tempo nor the gearing to be pedaling effectively.
The Creo is a road bike and not apt to show up on "trails" other than bike paths and lanes. Also anyone that has ridden an eBike uphill knows that it won't magically go 45kmh up any grade, especially a 250w (sic) version. My 1000w peak road bikes bog down and eat wh's like candy if I max it out on a hill climb so I toodle up at around 350w and save the 45k stuff for the down side where the extra weight of the system can get you going as fast as you dare to go.
But you still need a high enough gear to pedal effectively at speed and I just don't see a 46/11 117" gear being enough to do so on level ground. On my road bikes I use a front hub motor and Schlumpf High Speed drives with the equivalent of a 160" gear which allows me human effective human input on level ground at speed. A big issue I have found however is that aerodynamics take effect at speeds over 40kmh and if you are in it for distance any motor assistance used beyond that will shorten your ride considerably if you are crutching not crushing.....
As much as I Iike the torque sensing PAS on my eMTB I don't like PAS on my road bikes. For the consistent higher cadence I achieve on the road I prefer to not have PAS dictating my tempo/speed ratio whole "magic" legs effect. I set my desired watt output and pedal away as normal with no additional tension on the drive train nor worries about shifting under load as that is as normal dictated by common shifting sense while the motor does its thing unabated.
I have a new version underway that also features a(nother) new wheel standard coming available that is very promising in the gravel sector which is my primary interest as I have many miles of logging roads with no traffic and nice views where I live in OR.
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Awaiting components for the final hookup but even with the hub motor in place this bike rides a treat. 40c @ 30psi all day, steel frame/fork so great small bump compliance and a brifter operated dropper for when things get rad....Although it will weigh in around 40lbs. when the 864wh battery is on board, if my other bikes are any indication, handling is not effected by the extra weight at all.
Not trying to be a buzz kill here but after over 7000 miles of road time I just don't see a 250w restricted type bike in my future. But am glad that those that are investing are getting what they want out of them....
Worth having a look at this thread as this was discussed at length recently:
Anyone ever taken the battery out of a Creo (or Levo SL for that matter) and run acoustic? I know you’re still carrying the motor but it could still be light enough to feel like a ‘normal’ bike.
Note that the US version which is what I got has a Assisted speed to 28 miles an hour which is 45 km per hour.
Depending on the model of Creo you refer to, the official weight is from 26 1/2 lbs. to about 29 lbs. (multiply by 2.2 to get the kilogram equivalent),
Harvey thanks for sharing all the kool Creo details sounds impressive to me. For all of us I think improved battery charge density is coming soon that will be huge. Thank you Mr. Musk and others.Depending on the model of Creo you refer to, the official weight is from 26 1/2 lbs. to about 29 lbs. (multiply by 2.2 to get the kilogram equivalent), with the battery. For most people that weight is well within the confines of "normal" acoustic weight.
As to comparison, while the electric assist is turned off, and comparing it to my Trek Madone 5.7, the Creo feels more truck than Trek. In Eco mode, however, it has a very similar feel to my Trek. Note, though, I ride 700x23 on the Trek and 700x38 on the Creo and that could account for much of the feel difference.
When up to speed, with the motor in off mode, the Creo feels very much like a "normal" bike.
Just a minor correction before anyone scares themselves and wonders why the Creo weighs 63.8 kg's ....
I think you mean divide by 2.2 , so starting at 12kg's
If we have to have a limit that is much more reasonable. What is the experience like when you peddle past that? Is it like hitting the wall on the Levo's or is it more subtle? What is your cadence at 45 kph?
thanks thats in a good range for me ?Subtle and around 100 rpm.
Sweeting looking bike! ?I just picked up a Creo SL Carbon Comp EVO...
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