My bike climbs anything on a 7spd 14/28 freewheel. Of course I have 500w & a 48/38/28 triple chainring.i ride up 15% grades, trying to keep my speed above 5mph or so with minimal motor, and i love long and super fast descents, 40+. my 11 speeds are not enough! spin out all the time going fast, have to use more boost than i want on long steep climbs. i’d love to change my rear cassette for a 10-50.
So you actually have 21 speeds I only have 12Until yesterday I´d never tried the 28 ring in 3800 miles. For a lark I put it on the 28 up the longest,
steepest hill around here. It went right on up like I was on flat ground using rotary foot rests, virtually
effortless.
I have 21 spd range, wide enuff range for you? & my bike costs $1059 USD. I´m serious, it can climb anythingIf you ride e-bikes in mountains, you soon start appreciating wide gearing range. Also, the more gears are there the easier to maintain constant cadence.
- I use all 10 gears on the 10 spd cassette.
- All 11 gears on the 11 speed one.
- And I used all 12 gears on the e-MTB.
My hub drive e-bike has 24 speeds yet I wouldn't dare climb the 27% grade incline I climbed on the Vado today, and wouldn't even have tried that (also of today):I have 21 spd range, wide enuff range for you? & my bike costs $1059 USD. I´m serious, it can climb anything
like I´m riding on flat ground.
I know Europe been doing it longer but in the US they started putting more gears in automatic transmissions a while back wide gear rangeI concur with mschwett:
If you ride e-bikes in the mountains, you soon start appreciating wide gearing range. Also, the more gears are there the easier it is to maintain constant cadence.
- I use all 10 gears on the 10 spd cassette.
- All 11 gears on the 11 speed one.
- And I used all 12 gears on the e-MTB.
Use the throttle John so you don't need to worry about the drivetrain
i’d actually like a 2x drivetrain on a mid-motor road eBike. for better or worse, they’re all 1x! but if i wanted the bike to do all the work, at 500w, i’d get a motorcycleI have 21 spd range, wide enuff range for you? & my bike costs $1059 USD. I´m serious, it can climb anything
like I´m riding on flat ground.
The durability of 6 or 7 is there but the range isn't thereMy experience is that a 6 or 7 spd freewheel will last twice as long as a 8,9,10 speed cassette,
requires less frequent adjustment, & are generally cheaper & readily available. I have yet to
break a freewheel, but cannot say the same for cassettes.
With only 1 mule power allowed... Large rear gears are a necessityI concur with mschwett:
If you ride e-bikes in the mountains, you soon start appreciating wide gearing range. Also, the more gears are there the easier it is to maintain constant cadence.
- I use all 10 gears on the 10 spd cassette.
- All 11 gears on the 11 speed one.
- And I used all 12 gears on the e-MTB.
Use the throttle John so you don't need to worry about the drivetrain
Hey, I´m pedaling 99% of the time when not coasting. If it makes you feel better to struggle uphill, go for it.i’d actually like a 2x drivetrain on a mid-motor road eBike. for better or worse, they’re all 1x! but if i wanted the bike to do all the work, at 500w, i’d get a motorcycle
Remember you said that the next time you walk yur bike home. I have way more range than I ever use.The durability of 6 or 7 is there but the range isn't there
Not a problem for me, I´ve not been saddled by EU power & speed limits. Anything more than 18 spdMy hub drive e-bike has 24 speeds yet I wouldn't dare climb the 27% grade incline I climbed on the Vado today, and wouldn't even have tried that (also of today):
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Bear in mind John 21 speed doesn't necessarily mean the same what you get from an 11 or 12-speed 1x drivetrain, as many of the 21 or 24 gearings are redundant or impractical due to the necessity to keep the chain line possibly straight. (Here, I stopped at the roadsign, then downshifted to the granny gear and continued the climb, upshifting as necessary).
I ride 80% of the time on 38/16T. That covers most shorter hills or rolling flat out at a slightly higher cadence.Along with how many gear what is the biggest and the smallest gear you find useful? I have a ten tooth and I use it downhill mostly. I currently have 45 for climbing off road haven't found a need for more almost think the 50 would spin out.
I use all 10 gears on my trek allant8s.My experience is that a 6 or 7 spd freewheel will last twice as long as a 8,9,10 speed cassette,
requires less frequent adjustment, & are generally cheaper & readily available. I have yet to
break a freewheel, but cannot say the same for cassettes.
I don't think I be anymore likely to walk home then you my 12 speed does wear quicker then a 6 or 7 of the same quality but it doesn't just break. I can see where a cheap quality one would break.Remember you said that the next time you walk yur bike home. I have way more range than I ever use.