Catalyzt
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
To answer the OP's question-- and Rick, wow, it's a very good question, this motor's power delivery is unusual:
Level 1: 36%
Level 2: 85%
Level 3: 100%
Level 4: 250%
To which I will add:
Level 4 with extreme pedal pressure: 400%
This is a Marin bike which Pedaluma created, an experimental build that is still in development, but is now fully assembled and test ridden four times. What we think we will add/change: Move 11th gear to where 1st gear is currently for now, swap the 42t chainring for 38t to reduce or resolve cross chaining issues, which will require some modification that Pedal will spec and ship, and either just go tubeless with these tires or get new tubeless tires and go from 2.3 to 2.1.
Looking into my crystal ball, there's even a potential future where we find a way to get to a nine speed, hopefully a mega-range, from 52 to 10. As we've gotten deeper into this, and I've scoped around to find posts from other folks who have done something similar, there is some alchemy involved to get optimal power delivery and resolve the chainline issues. People have done it, it just takes some experimentation.
The motor is unrestricted; essentially, it's 'limited' by gear ratios, not software. This bike is a 29er, which complicates the assessment of power delivery even more! So: The motor is a bit anemic in levels 1 and 2 to begin with, and that issue is compounded by having larger wheels. Today I did my first 12-mile circuit of Griffith Park, which involves about 1,200 to 1,400 feet of vertical, if memory serves. Mostly broken pavement with stretches of sand and dirt.
The initial climb, which is long and moderate to steep, did seem like quite a grind if I tried to stay in Level 3 and out of Turbo-- it's a small, 336 Wh battery, and I'd already put about 10 miles on it, so I was concerned about range. It seemed just as hard as doing it on my 40nm Motobecane with a Shimano E5000. But here's what was strange: I'd look at my speedometer, and it's like, "Oh, I'm going 8 to 10 Mph, usually I'm going 6 Mph."
I kept trying to change my cadence and gearing so I'd be ascending at 6 MPH, so I could compare it to the Moto, but for some reason, it just wanted to go closer 8 or 9 MPH and kind of beat the crap out of me. Okay, fine, well, whatever-- bike's not done yet, the mods will probably change a lot of that.
The descent was uneventful-- handling is great, shocks need adjusting to reduce vibration, I'm getting used to the hard tail thing. High speed for the run was 28 MPH, about the same as for this route with the Motobecane.
What was really different was the super steep uphill dirt segment. I thought, "Okay, this probably won't work because I can't trust 1st gear, and barely trust 2nd." I start in turbo, and yeah-- immediately apparent that it's got way more grunt than I thought (and way more than the Moto.) There's a tricky hairpin right before the steepest part, and I get through it-- very different on a 29er, kinda hairy-- and then I pedal REALLY hard in second or third to manage the grade...
And it was like Turbo got a nitrous shot-- the bike just surged up that hill, faster than the Rossignol EP8 or E7000 or whatever I tried last summer, never felt that much power from an ebike-- it was a welcome rush, but unexpected, a little tricky with the grades and hairpins. It really is well-over 85nm, I'd believe it's 95, but only in this situation. May be how the torque sensor is set up, or maybe it overheated and freaked out... it did act a little odd on the last mile or two after that, like sometimes the motor stopped making noise, but still seemed to be delivering power?! Gotta test it again tomorrow. It was also on one bar of battery, occasionally bouncing back to two, so maybe the power delivery changed when I asked so much of it and the electrons were running low.
I had trouble on the last hill before my house, too... the same thing, I couldn't go 6 MPH, it wanted to go 8 MPH, and would only do that with more power from me. I wound up downshifting to first or second under load (probably first) and dropping the chain. Easy to plunk it back on, and restarting on a steep hill in low gear in Level 3 was no problem.
I came home utterly exhausted, drenched in sweat, but really excited. It's going to take some tinkering to get optimal power delivery out of it for my use-case scenario, but it will be so cool when we're done with it...
Level 1: 36%
Level 2: 85%
Level 3: 100%
Level 4: 250%
To which I will add:
Level 4 with extreme pedal pressure: 400%
This is a Marin bike which Pedaluma created, an experimental build that is still in development, but is now fully assembled and test ridden four times. What we think we will add/change: Move 11th gear to where 1st gear is currently for now, swap the 42t chainring for 38t to reduce or resolve cross chaining issues, which will require some modification that Pedal will spec and ship, and either just go tubeless with these tires or get new tubeless tires and go from 2.3 to 2.1.
Looking into my crystal ball, there's even a potential future where we find a way to get to a nine speed, hopefully a mega-range, from 52 to 10. As we've gotten deeper into this, and I've scoped around to find posts from other folks who have done something similar, there is some alchemy involved to get optimal power delivery and resolve the chainline issues. People have done it, it just takes some experimentation.
The motor is unrestricted; essentially, it's 'limited' by gear ratios, not software. This bike is a 29er, which complicates the assessment of power delivery even more! So: The motor is a bit anemic in levels 1 and 2 to begin with, and that issue is compounded by having larger wheels. Today I did my first 12-mile circuit of Griffith Park, which involves about 1,200 to 1,400 feet of vertical, if memory serves. Mostly broken pavement with stretches of sand and dirt.
The initial climb, which is long and moderate to steep, did seem like quite a grind if I tried to stay in Level 3 and out of Turbo-- it's a small, 336 Wh battery, and I'd already put about 10 miles on it, so I was concerned about range. It seemed just as hard as doing it on my 40nm Motobecane with a Shimano E5000. But here's what was strange: I'd look at my speedometer, and it's like, "Oh, I'm going 8 to 10 Mph, usually I'm going 6 Mph."
I kept trying to change my cadence and gearing so I'd be ascending at 6 MPH, so I could compare it to the Moto, but for some reason, it just wanted to go closer 8 or 9 MPH and kind of beat the crap out of me. Okay, fine, well, whatever-- bike's not done yet, the mods will probably change a lot of that.
The descent was uneventful-- handling is great, shocks need adjusting to reduce vibration, I'm getting used to the hard tail thing. High speed for the run was 28 MPH, about the same as for this route with the Motobecane.
What was really different was the super steep uphill dirt segment. I thought, "Okay, this probably won't work because I can't trust 1st gear, and barely trust 2nd." I start in turbo, and yeah-- immediately apparent that it's got way more grunt than I thought (and way more than the Moto.) There's a tricky hairpin right before the steepest part, and I get through it-- very different on a 29er, kinda hairy-- and then I pedal REALLY hard in second or third to manage the grade...
And it was like Turbo got a nitrous shot-- the bike just surged up that hill, faster than the Rossignol EP8 or E7000 or whatever I tried last summer, never felt that much power from an ebike-- it was a welcome rush, but unexpected, a little tricky with the grades and hairpins. It really is well-over 85nm, I'd believe it's 95, but only in this situation. May be how the torque sensor is set up, or maybe it overheated and freaked out... it did act a little odd on the last mile or two after that, like sometimes the motor stopped making noise, but still seemed to be delivering power?! Gotta test it again tomorrow. It was also on one bar of battery, occasionally bouncing back to two, so maybe the power delivery changed when I asked so much of it and the electrons were running low.
I had trouble on the last hill before my house, too... the same thing, I couldn't go 6 MPH, it wanted to go 8 MPH, and would only do that with more power from me. I wound up downshifting to first or second under load (probably first) and dropping the chain. Easy to plunk it back on, and restarting on a steep hill in low gear in Level 3 was no problem.
I came home utterly exhausted, drenched in sweat, but really excited. It's going to take some tinkering to get optimal power delivery out of it for my use-case scenario, but it will be so cool when we're done with it...