Both the demo bike I rode and the new D40 I picked up today came configured with the ‘engine map’ set to 100% across the board and I was told my bike was configured as it had been at the factory.
In other news:
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I had my dealer (Mike’s Bikes in Palo Alto) set it up tubeless and it was a good thing. The rear tire had a manufacturing defect that was causing a bulge on both sides
in the sidewall. I was planning to just buy some more rim tape and do the job myself but my wife convinced me $30 was worth it, and lo, it was so true.
I talked to them about a variety of things, like later DI2 conversion on the alloy frame. While it doesn’t have routing for the seatpost battery, their tech guys didn’t think it’d be a problem. If it came to it, they could just drill a hole.
I also asked about the bar-mounted iWoc controls, because I’m not completely sold on the top-tube system.
The bar mount version is designed to fit the flat-bar bikes and wouldn’t fit on drop bars, but it’s also cheap enough ($50) that I’m thinking about having them order one and see if I can modify it to work.
Its very simple — just a ring with two buttons and colored lights to indicate the mode. I’m thinking it would be simple to 3D print a new housing for it.
The other thing I did was try it out in the parking lot because I’ve been pretty confused by the engine mapping feature.
Since it comes from the factory with all three levels at 100%, it’s not remotely clear if that means it ships in max assist all the time or not, from folks here on the forum, I get the strong feeling that’s not the case and in fact when you reduce those settings in the app you’re lowering already lowered output.
A quick test pretty much confirmed that.
So, when I did my 25 mile ride last week, keep in mind I did it mostly at 50% of the normal low setting, which I think means a cap of 75 watts?
Now that I own one, I’ll be trying out a wide variety of stuff because this is a very fun new toy.