Bruce Arnold
Well-Known Member
For both the Scorpion and the HyperScorpion, I've found that there's a way to split the difference between wattage used from one PAS level to the next. Let's say you're on PAS 1. If you go to PAS 2, it may be more assistance than you need (if you like actually pedaling, as I do.) But you want a little more assistance. If you just slightly crack the throttle open so the Throttle Assist Boost (TAB) barely kicks in, the wattage on the meter goes up almost exactly one-half the distance between Level 1 and Level 2.
To put it another way, if X is the wattage at Level 1, Y is the wattage at Level 2, and T is the wattage when you've barely feathered the throttle while still in Level 1, then T = X + 0.5(Y-X).
This is a very handy feature. I use it all the time for slight inclines, catching up with the wife if I've dropped back to let a car pass, etc.
If the torque sensor worked as well on my HyperScorpion as it did on my old CCS, this wouldn't be necessary. You'd pedal a little harder, the torque sensor would up the wattage, you'd get the boost you want. I don't like the way the torque sensor is configured on the HS and have set the bike to cadence-only. Using the throttle like this is the equivalent of a "manual torque sensor."
Open the throttle about a third of the way and you may as well have gone to Level 2. Open it all the way and you may as well have gone to Level S. Of course there are times when you want the TAB for a shot of power and it's nice not to push the buttons up a level or two and then back down in a couple of seconds when you don't need it any more. I've been a fan of TAB for that reason ever since I got my CCS, 3 years ago.
I have Race mode enabled but have only used it once, just to try it. Sport and Race are identical if you're pedaling, unless you get over 28 mph, when Sport quits on you but Race keeps providing assistance, which I can't do on this bike (I could on the CCS.) Race does let you go past 20 mph with throttle-only. I haven't seen the situation when I wanted to go that fast without pedaling yet, so meh.
To put it another way, if X is the wattage at Level 1, Y is the wattage at Level 2, and T is the wattage when you've barely feathered the throttle while still in Level 1, then T = X + 0.5(Y-X).
This is a very handy feature. I use it all the time for slight inclines, catching up with the wife if I've dropped back to let a car pass, etc.
If the torque sensor worked as well on my HyperScorpion as it did on my old CCS, this wouldn't be necessary. You'd pedal a little harder, the torque sensor would up the wattage, you'd get the boost you want. I don't like the way the torque sensor is configured on the HS and have set the bike to cadence-only. Using the throttle like this is the equivalent of a "manual torque sensor."
Open the throttle about a third of the way and you may as well have gone to Level 2. Open it all the way and you may as well have gone to Level S. Of course there are times when you want the TAB for a shot of power and it's nice not to push the buttons up a level or two and then back down in a couple of seconds when you don't need it any more. I've been a fan of TAB for that reason ever since I got my CCS, 3 years ago.
I have Race mode enabled but have only used it once, just to try it. Sport and Race are identical if you're pedaling, unless you get over 28 mph, when Sport quits on you but Race keeps providing assistance, which I can't do on this bike (I could on the CCS.) Race does let you go past 20 mph with throttle-only. I haven't seen the situation when I wanted to go that fast without pedaling yet, so meh.