Jon,
Let me chime in.
In case you are a fit person, any SL e-bike has been made for you. As Jodi said: Creo if you are a fan of road/gravel cycling, Vado SL for general cycling. You could probably do with a traditional bike: any SL bike will make you riding upwind or uphill with assistance easier; and you would ride the SL as a traditional bike otherwise.
The "full power" siblings, that is Vado (or Como - if you need much comfort but probably you do not) can provide a lot of power, enabling you to travel fast or conquer dramatic hills if that is your case. (The 5.0 is made with the best components available for the U.S. market and uses the strongest motor).
One thing I think was overlooked by the most of the thread participants is Specialized Turbo e-bikes are fully tune-able. That is, you can define the assistance % and maximum motor power ceiling in the range of 0-100%. Using Mission Control app turns your Turbo e-bike into a workout machine: just connect a HR monitor, and the e-bike will only assist you to keep your heart rate constant.
I need to hear yet about another e-bike brand that can do the same as Specialized can
The rider's performance tools available for Turbo e-bikes are unique, and no other brand can provide an equal solution yet (think of post-ride charts of your leg power or heart rate!)
SL or "full power" Turbo? If you want to ride an e-bike that is as close to a traditional bike as possible, choose an SL. If you want to have good workout on some day but travel very fast on another, it is the "full power" Turbo e-bike.
and i guess S works would be worse ?
P.S. S-Works is the premium brand within already premium Specialized. "Crème de la crème" as to say it.
There is yet another matter: Aluminium vs Carbon Fibre. As you might have noticed Jon, S-Works e-bikes are Carbon Fibre only while Specialized offer both CF and Alu e-bikes. CF e-bike is minimally more lightweight than the aluminium one is. The major reason of building bikes/e-bikes of CF is the riding property: CF will dampen road imperfections even if there is no suspension in the bike. There are downsides of CF bikes:
- Very expensive
- CF is brittle and bike components such as frame can crack and break; which is potentially not only very expensive but also dangerous
- Mechanical work with CF bike requires appropriate tools and care as not to damage CF components.
- It is the best to ride a CF bike on perfect roads...
That said: CF bikes is the thing for professional cyclists but not really for everyone. In the world of e-bikes, it is not always the more money the better product. More money can buy you a professional but not necessarily practical product.