ajb
New Member
- Region
- USA
Hi everyone, I'll try and keep this as short as I can.
Last year around April I bought an Aventon Level (V1). After over 3k miles ridden commuting to work nearly every day (16 mile round trip) (even through much of the winter), I can safely say that I am 100% sold on the idea of e-bikes. But owning my first one has also helped me understand better what I want in an e-bike:
Really one of the main things I'm worried about is the fact that some of these premium class 3 e-bikes seem to be class 3 only in the sense that they don't inhibit you from going above 20 mph—not in the sense that they make 28 mph a reasonably sustainable speed. I want to pedal, but I want the required effort to be reasonable, and I want ~25 mph to be reasonable too at that effort on the highest pedal assist. Yet I can't really know without hearing from people with firsthand experience riding the bikes.
Some other bikes seem to have strong motors (from what I can find via reviews)—yet no suspension. I've ridden my hub drive Aventon Level at 28 mph with the suspension locked—and those bumps really rattle your bones. Maybe the trails where I live just suck, but for me suspension is a must if I'm going to shell out $3k+.
What is everyone's thoughts and opinions on which direction I should be going here? I come with a completely open mind.
FYI The Turbo Como 4.0 IGH is on sale right now for $3,250 (down from $4,750 apparently). Seems like an insane value compared to the other options on this list.
Last year around April I bought an Aventon Level (V1). After over 3k miles ridden commuting to work nearly every day (16 mile round trip) (even through much of the winter), I can safely say that I am 100% sold on the idea of e-bikes. But owning my first one has also helped me understand better what I want in an e-bike:
- ESSENTIAL: A Mid-Drive motor with a proper torque sensor and a more natural feel (compared to a hub motor).
- ESSENTIAL: A belt drive setup with an internal gear hub. Low maintenance and less noise is the dream here.
- ESSENTIAL: The ability to reasonably maintain class 3 speeds (in other words, above 20 mph, up to 28 mph).
- ESSENTIAL: Specced out for commuting. This means it should have fenders, lights, and a solid rear rack.
- OPTIONAL: Front suspension, and even better, a suspension seat post included stock.
- OPTIONAL: No automatic shifting garbage. Let me handle the shifting myself.
- Gazelle C380+: Very solid all round. Gazelle has also dropped their 2023 lineup, yet it doesn't include a single class 3 bike—RIP.
- Specialized Turbo Como 4.0 IGH: All the Specialized bikes as far as I've found are reported to have exceptionally quite and natural feeling motors—yet oddly few reviews on YouTube for the newer models. This bike really seems to be the only one which truly checks all the boxes—provided class 3 speeds are actually maintainable while riding it. It even seems to have a suspension seat post included stock. What more could I want? Weirdly, the Vado doesn't appear to have a 4.0 IGH version.
- Specialized Turbo Como/Vado 3.0 IGH: I'm worried that the assist would be too weak to realistically maintain class 3 speeds—more than the other bikes on this list.
- Specialized Turbo Como/Vado 5.0 IGH: Very nice, but I wish it had the option to shift manually.
- Priority Current: Best value anywhere I've seen, but it has no rear rack for some reason, and no suspension. Gotta cut costs somewhere I guess.
- Serial 1 RUSH/CTY SPEED: Absolutely gorgeous internal wiring, but I wish it had the option to shift manually, and it has no suspension.
- Fuell Flluid-1S: Seems to have potential, but doesn't seem as nice as some others on this list.
- Riese & Muller: Some bikes fit the bill, but they all cost an arm and a leg (like $7k+).
Really one of the main things I'm worried about is the fact that some of these premium class 3 e-bikes seem to be class 3 only in the sense that they don't inhibit you from going above 20 mph—not in the sense that they make 28 mph a reasonably sustainable speed. I want to pedal, but I want the required effort to be reasonable, and I want ~25 mph to be reasonable too at that effort on the highest pedal assist. Yet I can't really know without hearing from people with firsthand experience riding the bikes.
Some other bikes seem to have strong motors (from what I can find via reviews)—yet no suspension. I've ridden my hub drive Aventon Level at 28 mph with the suspension locked—and those bumps really rattle your bones. Maybe the trails where I live just suck, but for me suspension is a must if I'm going to shell out $3k+.
What is everyone's thoughts and opinions on which direction I should be going here? I come with a completely open mind.
FYI The Turbo Como 4.0 IGH is on sale right now for $3,250 (down from $4,750 apparently). Seems like an insane value compared to the other options on this list.
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