Amazing design. Looks to be about perfect integration. Probably unobtainable.
They're going to take a while to clear with the travel chainsaw!
A couple of questions for the brains trust here... I've been dipping my toe into MTBing the last month or so. Never done any since I was banging around the reserves as a kid on my rigid hybrid but I'm really enjoying it. I ride an Explore that looks a lot like the image below (yes, complete with fenders, rack and lights). It's classed as an 'adventure bike', whatever that is, so more suited to trekking and light gravel. The front shocks are RST Vivair's. They're air shocks but only have 60mm of travel.
View attachment 101455
There is the option of selling my bike (purchased for $4k, sell for maybe $2.5k - 3), but that's still close to a $4-5k outlay for a new eMTB. Yes, I confess I've been looking. If I went that route would probably settle on something like a Merida Sixty 500. I just can't justify that purchase cost to myself right now though. Plus there's going to be compromises kitting it out to do double duty as my 9-5 commuter (rack, fenders, puncture resistant tyres).
- Am I going to destroy my bike if I step up the single trail riding? I'm very green so to date I'm not hitting the technical trails. At the roughest I'm dropping down the odd small rock or root and getting very insubstantial air off jumps. I could strip the fenders and rack off but I think the front light is staying - it's internally cabled. I can see the vibrations and impacts taking a toll over time as things loosen. I'm limiting myself to more flowing firetrails on this bike for now.
- I'm toying with the idea of a bargain UNPOWERED FS bike. Sacre bleu! I said I'd never buy an unpowered bike again, but here we are. The Polygon Siskiu D7 caught my eye for AU$2.5k. I can feel I'm too timid with my ebike on the tracks - 1) it's my commuter, 2) I really like it, 3) I want to hang on to it for years, 4) and I don't want to trash it. Something to learn, crash and abuse is starting to make sense in my mind. Can you go back to unpowered bikes though? I see virtually everyone else in the local bike park on unpowered MTB's, I'm still reasonably fit so figure I should probably be able to hack it too, but curious on thoughts here. Local parks have level to gradually descending runs with about 50 - 70m climbs to reset. Any other models good for a beginner?
I can't outright buy a second FS ebike. Not yet anyway! Any other thoughts or advice on my situation?
Not necessarily. Giant uses different battery types for different e-bikes. Some are side loaded, other are bottom loaded etc.I think the batteries are cross compatible with your roam
Thank you! You've given me much to consider. I'm in Newcastle, so unfortunately don't think we'll be crossing paths anytime soon. That's quite the fleet. Is the Levo the go-to these days, or do you still make time for the others on occasion?Where are you based ? ( trying to work out if I can take you out to try all those options for a day, I'm in gippsland, victoria), My fleet is a levo sl, giant full e pro, scott genius 940, norco optic a7.2 , an old giant trance, and a marin hard tail - so 2 x ds emtb, an enduro ds mebike, 2 x trail ds mebikes, and a hardtail. ( 3 teenage kids)
Back in 2017 I bought myself a norco optic A7.2 , it's similar spec / slightly more capable than the polygon. I hated it, and rarely ride it ( the kids love it) . Admittedly I was coming off an old but high end giant trance..... but the recon forks are sticky , the bike ended up being so heavy it was a mongrel to ride uphill, and the lower quality components all failed within a couple of years ( eg I've just replaced the front wheel and will be upgrading the forks this week because my 12 yo is pushing it too hard) . You end up spending big on the lower spec bikes over time. Plus read the warranty fine print with bicyclesonline - YOU pay to post the bike back when it arrives faulty.
Personally, at that budget I'd get a better spec hardtail - lighter, more responsive to learn on etc. If you could stretch those $ a bit further, have a really good look at eg a scott genius or spark - the remote suspension switch makes them viable for climbing . Or perhaps a giant trance if you can find one - they have llvely geometry and are reasonable climbing bikes.
Have you considered chasing a giant talon? There are still a few around in stores, I think the batteries are cross compatible with your roam and so is the motor - so you have spares for when they go beyond the warranty period, plus the ability to carry a spare battery on long rides.
You will learn skills quicker on a light regular bike, but you will ride a LOT more on an emtb.