I added to my loop for a total of 15.7 miles including some dirt back roads and double the elevation of my usual loop (around 1300 feet). I stopped at the coffee shop to do some work from my phone for nearly an hour. It was 53 degrees when I left and I chose to wear the new rain coat and stretch pants. The rain coat is a bit much once it warms up, but keeping the wind off me while on the downhills was definitely a good thing. I was on the edge of wearing finger gloves. I am glad I didn't, but a bit colder (with no chance of significant warm up) would likely need real gloves. The stretch pants don't require me to unload my pockets. I had an empty pannier on my bike because I forgot my leatherman, keys and wallet were all still in my pants pockets. That's pretty nice.
I missed the GPS notification for one of my turns and added about 2 miles to the planned trip. On the plus side, ride with GPS re-routes without issue. I only used about 27% of the battery. I could have done better, but some of the hills I just wanted to be done (I am getting over a cough for weeks. Multiple tests say it's not covid, but I have never had one hang on like this). I think all of it would be doable at 50% support if I am fresh and prepped for the ride. That means I really might get close to that 90 mile battery mark in real world usage when the purpose is to exercise. That really opens up long range targets. Ben & Jerry's factory by bike? yes? YES!!!
It was a misty morning, so while the ride was amazing, a lot of the views were blocked by the mist.
I have no issues with this bike on the rougher stuff. I probably went just about to the limit of roughness I am likely to take this bike. It responds well, and I naturally went into a more semi-standing mountain biking type position at times. I would be comfortable on it on any "reasonable" trail based surface.
The respiro saddle: I had quite a bit of numbness particularly in my left hand which never needs to move off the grip. (Right hand manages RWGPS). And, while I had no comfort issues *on* the bike, the instant I got off the bike, I was sore. I also think the vibrations of unpaved, dirt, rock roads had a pretty significant effect. I think I need to move the seat forward just a touch to alleviate the hand numbness and put the primary padding of the saddle in the right place. But, this was really good overall. If I ditch the hand numbness and keep the same saddle comfort, this is fantastic.
I like a lot of stuff about this bike. I love having belt drive. I love not thinking about shifting. I love having no clatter and jumps from gear changes. I love the power micro tune letting me pick exactly what level of support I want. It has "sufficient" power (at least, not having hauled anything yet). I love the garmin radar. I think I would possibly do better from a comfort perspective on a more mountain bike setup that leans toward hybrid. The other thing is I am routinely pushing this bike to it's peak power. So if I am pushing 250 watts into 50% micro tune, then I am getting about 2x me with 250 watts added by the motor. But, if I am pushing 400 watts, I am still only getting around 270 added by the motor (I think, can't remember the exact peak power could be a bit higher ). At 100% micro tune I will get peak power up to 4x me. But the motor can't actually reach 4x of 400 watts rider power. It will add whatever the peak power of the motor is to my rider power. So, if I stay at about 200 watts rider power (or less), I take full advantage of the peak power of the motor while doing a lot less work.
That's all fine, but I am rarely under 200 watts in a scenario where I am using significant assistance, unless I threw in the towel, and just trying to survive a hill, in which case I would normally be in 130 watt range and 100% support with as casual a pedal os I can get around 75 RPM. I suspect, a mountain bike with a crazy peak power motor would feel more like the bike is scaling with me. In this respect, the current and this bike felt very similar. It's like I hit a "wall" of support and I either push myself harder, or scale back and let the bike do it. I would love to experience the elimination of that wall.