Orbea D40 Electric Bike Impressions
Today I tried the Orbea D40 e-bike. I have been looking at e bikes because I am now 70, (female) older and way slower. I was never a top notch rider and am in my club’s slower rider groups that does anywhere from 30 to 45 miles at a time. Occasionally, when I am in shape and have ridden a lot, I do metric centuries, which I find fun. But I don’t want to ride 3 or 4 days a week to try to be able to ride faster and longer courses.
After looking at heavier and beefier pedal assist e-bikes, I found they were all too heavy for me to lift and put on my shelf-type bike rack by myself. That rules them out. Plus the pedal assist was over powering but great on the hills. The Giant E pedal assist e bike I tried was more like riding a small motor scooter.
Enter the new light weight e-bikes put out my Orbea, Bianchi, Wilier and others. Most of them are using the ebikemotion X35 250 watt battery in the rear hub. It is a true pedal assist bike.
The on/off switch and levels are on the top frame bar. But the button needs some time to get used to as you have to be in blinking mode to go up or down a level which means pushing the buttons a lot. Plus you have to look down at it, which is a bit distracting. I would have preferred the button to be on the handle bars. Plus I found combining the levels with the gears also takes some time to get used to and figure out what is best at what gear.
The lowest level, green was surprisingly robust and a bit overpowering on the flats. On the flats I really didn’t need it, but on small hills it was fine. The orange level I struggled to find the right place and gears. This will take more work for me.
But for me and my level, I found the red/highest level a bit underwhelming. Yes, it revved up, but on the 16% short hill I tried it on, I had to make sure that a) I had already switched to red, and b) I was still in my lowest gear. This took time and practice in coordinating the buttons and shifting. It worked well to about half way up, and then I was working very hard to make it to the top, and it was not a very long hill. Great for in-shape riders, looking for just a little pedal assist, but surprisingly challenging for an out-of-shape, lower end rider. I made it up the hill two out of three times, but on one try, didn’t switch to red and low gear fast enough and the motor basically stopped, the extra weight showed up, and I had to get off the bike and push it the rest of the way up the hill. A bit discouraging.
I didn’t have the opportunity to try it on rolling hills, but I think I would like it. So yes, I will now be able to stay up with the faster riders in my C (lower) class, but I would not be able to take on sustained hills with higher riders. For example, at my level, and on my Specialized Ruby with extra gears, I would not be able to go up Page Mill Road in Palo Alto up to Skyline, a fairly steep hill. Even with the Orbea at red, I doubt I could do it. In other words, the bike would be good for my level and my class, and I probably be able to keep up with higher levels on the flats, but definitely not higher end riders on long climbs. But I might try it.
Handling wise, it is an interesting bike. Light on the front end and heavier on the back. It is a compromise between my road bike and a heavier e-bike and you have to be prepared that you need to compensate on turns and a bit downhill. I did think it was a bit slower downhill, and those that regularly bomb downhills, will probably feel somewhat of a difference.
Overall, I liked the bike, but it isn’t going to allow me to ride with A and B riders who do lots of hills. The handling is a compromise and that is OK with me. What I would have preferred is a bike with a bit more assist and push up steep hills.
Also, the industry seems to be on the cusp with light weight bikes. I believe in the next few years we will see the development of lighter and more powerful motors that will help people like me. Since the Orbea has the largest range of lightweight bikes right now, I will probably go with a lower to medium end bike and then see how the industry has changed and progressed in the next few years, then change up. I am sure that we will see more companies offering more lightweight and maybe medium weight options in the future.