@Stefan Mikes - great thread! and you're lucky to have your brother to help/do the install - it looked like a nightmare!
It makes the BadAss4 appear sooo much easier, and fortunately my e-bike has the old school spoke magnet
@Kal's post changed the goal posts a bit
I fitted the Speed box 2.0 to my 2020 Giant Trance E+ Pro 3 last night. All up it took about 30 minutes and works great. Just press Walk then up, down, up, down and then no more limit. From factory my bike had the sensor connector looped under the bashplate rather than up behind the Battery connector like some bikes have. I did not remove the motor. So all I did was remove the bashplate, connect the speedbox, poke the speedbox under the battery connector, and then I ended up with 3 of the 4 speedbox connectors tucked under the bash plate as per photos. I was concerned about the cables rubbing against the frame so I put a section of hard plastic between to stop any rubbing. With hind sight if I removed the battery connector I might have got things a bit more tidy.
A vast difference between
@Stefan Mikes' install and
@Kal's just removing the bash plate.
After the 1st couple of pages of this thread I was convinced the BadAss4 was the way to go on my Giant Revolt E+ Pro.
As
@iskjone mentioned on page 2,
@Stefan Mikes put his bike through e-bike heart surgery to fit the dongle...
@Kal just had a botox session
Any guidance on which end of the scale my Revolt would be?
Still leaning towards the BadAss, so a question more likely directed at
@FlatSix911...
For the simplicity of the install of the BadAss over the dongles, I'm happy to compromise that speed and distance won't read correctly on the display with a BadAss...
The display on my Giant has the battery level and an estimated (remaining) range.
...will the range estimate also be thrown out of whack with a BadAss connected?...I'm guessing it would be...but maybe not...the algorithms used to calculate the remaining range just may automagically compensate with the BadAss inplace...or not?
cheers,
Mike