troehrkasse
EBR Webmaster
- Region
- USA
- City
- Fort Collins
On the 4th of July I rode with Houshmand and the employees of Ebikes USA on a group ride to the top of Pikes Peak, a popular 14-er in Colorado. I got to pick any bike from their inventory for my ride and couldn't pass up the opportunity to try out the Rockstar!
It was a hell of a ride, much harder than I expected... I'm not sure why I thought it would be easier, I just haven't attempted a ride like this before and I was overly optimistic. The ascent was 19 miles with about 7,000 feet of elevation gain. Traffic was extremely heavy, that's what we get for doing this on a holiday, although we did start very early in an attempt to beat traffic.
The Rockstar did amazing. My dad rode one as well, and we were the only two riders with any battery left to spare at the end (me with 14% and my dad had 6%). Here's how all the ebikes fared:
Thoughts on the Rockstar
The Rockstar is one hell of an ebike. It looks and feels huge, weighs 83 pounds, but for me it was the perfect combination of stable and nimble. Keep in mind I'm a pretty big guy at 6ft 3in and about 200 pounds. It's ridiculously powerful, able to easily accelerate up the inclines on throttle (at least when the battery is high). During the ascent I doubled back about 2 miles to check on our broken down riders, and then repeated that 2 miles of the ascent to catch up with the other riders, maintaining ~20mph using level 5 assist and pedaling briskly. I regretted that excessive motor use later, when I was running out of battery near the summit... live and learn! I'm not a professional MTB rider by any means, so I can't evaluate the Rockstar from that perspective, but I can say it's the most fun I've had on an ebike in a long time. It felt incredibly well built, easily the best I've ridden from SONDORS (and I've ridden almost their whole lineup). I think it's impressive that it outperformed the Current and Response from Diamondback, both of which have efficient and expensive Gen 4 Bosch motors (Performance Line Speed). To be fair, the Rockstar battery pack is about twice the capacity of what's in the Diamondbacks... but still! The two Diamondback riders had to use lower assist levels on average, with no throttles.
It was a hell of a ride, much harder than I expected... I'm not sure why I thought it would be easier, I just haven't attempted a ride like this before and I was overly optimistic. The ascent was 19 miles with about 7,000 feet of elevation gain. Traffic was extremely heavy, that's what we get for doing this on a holiday, although we did start very early in an attempt to beat traffic.
The Rockstar did amazing. My dad rode one as well, and we were the only two riders with any battery left to spare at the end (me with 14% and my dad had 6%). Here's how all the ebikes fared:
- Diamondback Current, battery died about 3/4 mile from the top. Rider walked it the rest of the way up as he was completely fried himself by that point.
- SONDORS X custom build, died about the same spot as the Current and walked up to the top.
- Me and my dad rode our Rockstars all the way to the top, but we were under 20% for the last couple miles and it was pretty brutal, motor power was pretty low once we got under 20% and the throttle did absolutely nothing.
- Diamondback Response died about one mile from the top, rider opted to turn around and head down (smart because he avoided the worst of the incoming storm, more on that below).
- Juiced CrossCurrent, made it about 10 miles up before the motor started overheating. Rider rode the rest of the way up in the shop van and then rode the downhill.
- Two other custom modded SONDORS bikes broke down about a mile in, motor cutting out on one, fried controller on the other. Bad luck as the ebikes have about 10k miles each and have been to the top of several other 14-ers!
Thoughts on the Rockstar
The Rockstar is one hell of an ebike. It looks and feels huge, weighs 83 pounds, but for me it was the perfect combination of stable and nimble. Keep in mind I'm a pretty big guy at 6ft 3in and about 200 pounds. It's ridiculously powerful, able to easily accelerate up the inclines on throttle (at least when the battery is high). During the ascent I doubled back about 2 miles to check on our broken down riders, and then repeated that 2 miles of the ascent to catch up with the other riders, maintaining ~20mph using level 5 assist and pedaling briskly. I regretted that excessive motor use later, when I was running out of battery near the summit... live and learn! I'm not a professional MTB rider by any means, so I can't evaluate the Rockstar from that perspective, but I can say it's the most fun I've had on an ebike in a long time. It felt incredibly well built, easily the best I've ridden from SONDORS (and I've ridden almost their whole lineup). I think it's impressive that it outperformed the Current and Response from Diamondback, both of which have efficient and expensive Gen 4 Bosch motors (Performance Line Speed). To be fair, the Rockstar battery pack is about twice the capacity of what's in the Diamondbacks... but still! The two Diamondback riders had to use lower assist levels on average, with no throttles.
- I rode in level 3 assist for most of the ascent with occasional throttle use during the first half. I used gears 2 or 3 for the first half, most of the last half of the ascent was in first gear, and for the last two miles or so I bumped it up to level 5 assist, although it didn't feel any different than 3 at that point since I was below 20% battery remaining. I had to stand up on the pedals for the last half mile or so, my legs were just noodles by then.
- I reached the summit with 17% battery to spare. The next 3% went to the few inclines on the ride down, I kept it at 0 for most of the descent but kept the display on so I could see my speed.
- Speaking of speed: I hit a top speed of 59.1mph on the ascent down, during the second half of the descent when conditions were nicer (which I didn't film). It's insane to me that I was able to get going that fast and still feel safe! Seriously, the Rockstar felt rock(star)-solid stable, there was never any point where I felt even the slightest wobble or instability. I honestly had no idea I was going that fast, until I reached the bottom and checked my top speed record in the display settings. I ride motorcycles a lot and I think that contributed, I'm used to the feeling of high speed on two wheels. The next fastest rider was on the Diamondback Current and I believe he hit 47.3mph.
- Brakes did amazing. I had to use them heavily on the descent, plus slow down in a hurry a few times due to clueless drivers deciding to perform a 37-point U-turn right in front of me.
- Suspension was also awesome! I did quite a bit of riding on the shoulder and in the drainage ditch next to the highway, some intentional to bypass traffic, some unplanned to dodge car doors opened right in front of me. Passengers never seem to check the mirror before randomly exiting their vehicle!