So today was my first ride on my new bike , 46 miles, 3600 feet of climbing and I set off with 85% in the battery and returned with 20% . Definitely made life a lot easier but my legs were knackered by the end of the ride.
Haven't noticed either of these. The motor rpm is 0 above 20 mph according to the ebikemotion app, so I doubt there is any drag.Hi All, I did an extended test ride an Orbea Gain M30. Pretty nice, but when grinding up a climb out of the saddle with the assist on, the power would sometimes cut out mid-stroke. It was definitely an unpleasant experience and the guys in the shop were able to duplicate it. Is this normal for this system? Never had that happen on other ebikes.
The other thing was a noticeable amount of drag trying to slow me down when coasting or just slowly spinning the cranks when travelling over the 20mph limit. Does the amount of assist you have programmed into each step have any bearing on this?
Farrallon, never experienced any drag whatsoever. Have noticed though? When dropping from level 3 back through to eco mode, it takes the motor a little while to "catch up" A couple of reverse turns on the pedals brings it back on line. Now like you, I climb hills "in n out" the saddle pushing a bigger gear. Or I should say used too? The Gains motor has a sweet spot for assisting, for me this is around 75/80rpm. When climbing I now spin lower gears and in return receive maximum assist with whatever level I'm in at that moment. To confirm this, I've done rides pushing a largish gear (average 65rpm) with very little battery usage. Same 40 mile ride, averaging this time 78rpm, I used 3 times the amount. My conclusion? The motor likes revs on hills, otherwise it doesn't fulfil it's role very well. Where I live in East Riding of Yorkshire, we have the rolling Yorkshire Wolds, with some short but very steep climbs. Now that I use revs on those hills, the bike tackles them well.
Jaxx
I have a wilier but all same set up as orbea. Can you explain ( I am thick,
!) how you approach your riding to get better battery usage
At moment I use assistance ie turn motor on only when I need it. Usually in 100% eco
Steve, my rides average 14.8 - 15.2mph I always have eco switched on (80%) Other two levels of assist (100%) Around here are the rolling hills of the Yorkshire Wolds (short but steep) climbs. I believe the assist is set-up to be most advantageous around 75-80rpm. I ride generally a larger gear (avg 66rpm) moving at 15-16mph at this cadence does not appear to use much battery. Likewise climbing (grinding a bigger gear) also appears to offer little in the way of assist. Climb the same hill maintaining a high cadence gives you more in the way of help from the motor - hence more usage of the battery. Perhaps it suits my style of riding? I am averaging at least 120 miles to a charge, and not a full charge? I usually charge to around 85%. To sumerise? On flat roads, I ride my usual lower cadence and now on hills sit and spin instead of "In n Out" the saddle. Hope this makes sense?
Steve, my rides average 14.8 - 15.2mph I always have eco switched on (80%) Other two levels of assist (100%) Around here are the rolling hills of the Yorkshire Wolds (short but steep) climbs. I believe the assist is set-up to be most advantageous around 75-80rpm. I ride generally a larger gear (avg 66rpm) moving at 15-16mph at this cadence does not appear to use much battery. Likewise climbing (grinding a bigger gear) also appears to offer little in the way of assist. Climb the same hill maintaining a high cadence gives you more in the way of help from the motor - hence more usage of the battery. Perhaps it suits my style of riding? I am averaging at least 120 miles to a charge, and not a full charge? I usually charge to around 85%. To sumerise? On flat roads, I ride my usual lower cadence and now on hills sit and spin instead of "In n Out" the saddle. Hope this makes sense?