smorgasbord
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
I mosied over to the Watt Wagons site to look at the Travalanche today. I recently bought a high power full suspension carbon fiber bike, and having some issues with it, I was curious to see what this alternative might have been for me if it had been available (or I had known about it) when I bought my bike.
First, the (obvious) good:
First, the (obvious) good:
- Full-suspension carbon fiber frame with low stand-off height
- Really good suspension choices (Rock Shox rear, Manitou Dorado Pro front fork (and with a hefty 20mm instead of the Boost-standard 15mm through axle).
- Well-reviewed Magura MT7 brakes with 203mm rotors front and rear.
- The beasty Bafang Ultra with an optional 3K watt controller!
- Quality DT Swiss wheels
- Solid SRAM GX drivetrain
- A 728 Wh battery may seem big, but with a 3K watt controller and the resulting high speeds/high current draw, it would be interesting to have a larger battery option or a dual battery setup. This isn't a commuting bike, of course, but I could see some people doing long day rides on combination on/off pavement.
- DT Swiss makes nice hubs and rims, but spec'ing a 30mm inside rim width on a bike that can support 3.5" tires maybe isn't ideal. Should be OK for the 3" wide tires that come stock, though. I don't have enough off-road experience to know if the 36 tooth (10 degrees of slack) is a problem or not, but I do think the ratchet versus pawl system that DT Swiss uses is robust.
- The SRAM GX is the sweet spot for price/performance in the SRAM drivetrain line, but the Travalanche has only the 11-speed version, not the latest 12-speed. The website doesn't say, but I'm assuming that the cassette is the XG-1150 model, which has a 10-42 tooth cog range. That misses the big 50 tooth baby gear on the 12-speed, which would be a real advantage in steep off-roading (or San Francisco!). It's great to have the Rohloff option, but that's a much pricier way to get that super-low gear.
- Given the power of the motor, having the lower 50 tooth cog would enable a larger front chainring for higher top speed when on-road. I know of one Rohloff owner who upgraded his bike from a 42 tooth chainring to something larger (I forget how much larger he went).