The solution to that is to adjust the cadence programming so it can't run away from you, which it does on the factory tune. Then you just dial back the pedal assist to a lower level than what you need to maintain your preferred cadfence level. So you are always expending effort to maintain cadence. Your tuning should allow very little assist, or a whole lot, so you have a range of assist that lets you dial your effort level way up or down as your desires of the moment dictate.
I have to agree with
@slitespd's post. I have been building and riding BBSHD'd bikes since 2017, and I am a pedaler, not a throttler. I am a lifelong cyclist, ride for exercise and I started out at around 265 lbs, so I was similarly motivated to work hard. I have never heard of bearing wear for this reason, but I DO know what wear is caused by hard pedaling, and its not the bearings. In fact, bearing wear makes no sense as you are not putting anywhere near the rpms or the torque on the spindle and bearings as the motor does.
I get the feeling you got some bad advice either from a seller who wanted to shift the blame from a defective product, or an internet expert on a forum... who wasn't much of one. Of course, that could be me too. But think through the logic of that argument. Look at the axle+bearing assembly (and the two other bearings built into the casing and motor cover) and try and understand how that mechanism of action is possible. But look at the clutch and picture how it is ordinarily freewheeling internally, until you start torqueing the bejesus out of it, its plastic gears and its three little pawls (and lets remember how three-pawl cassette bodies fare long-term under strong mid drive power).
Here's a very detailed look at the clutch and its replacement.
To get that power level, and have the motor survive it, you are looking at an X1 Pro. My X1 Pro will happily feed that much power and more (peaks around 4000w), but it can't go that high on pedal assist. I would not expect that motor to do well long-term at those power levels. Also you have to realize no one will ever wonder whether you are riding an ebike due to the noise all motors in this class put out.
FYI by comparison, a 30a BBSHD on a 52v battery is going to peak at over 1700w and will happily provide a steady 1500w continuous output on throttle. My heavier-output tunes give me pedal assist at around 1000w on PAS9 but you can get it up higher than that.
Actually rode it at zero because I wanted the exercise. I was pretty heavy and wanted to maintain a 15 mph speed, apparently a big mistake. I tend not to use the throttle except to cross a busy street, to mount the bike, or to restart on a climb. My only complaint about theBBSHD is the cadence sensor vs a torque sensor. I will take a closer look the CYC line. My goal is to get a constant 1,500 watt with a peak of about 2,200 watts.
You state that you want the exercise and don`t run the motor on pas levels but you want 2 giga bites of power. I don`t understand.
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