Lol, I give! Enjoy your powah!
Edit: I’m curious, have you ridden a truly technical mountain bike trail?
Do you think twice the power would help or hinder this professional rider?
If I came across as argumentative I apologize. My intentions are strictly conversational. I’m new to ebikes, new to off pavement riding, live in central Iowa (no mountains) so no I’m not as badass as you. This reminds me of another very similar situation I was in about ten years ago. Sorry in advance for the long post:
I have been into motorcycles for quite awhile now, and was, still am, a big fan of Victory cruisers. Like a Harley but they’re better looking, more comfortable, more powerful, handle and brake better. A long time ago as part of a national meet a Polaris engineer was giving a keynote and did a q and a asking us about what we wanted. They had recently gotten into touring bikes, but that engine that was decent in a 650 lb cruiser was a bit anemic in an 850 lb tourer. At the time they were preparing to release a smaller displacement v-twin for a smaller cruiser, that made 100 hp. I told him what I wanted was for that motor to be doubled as a 200 hp silky smooth V-4 for a proper touring bike. He rolled his eyes and blew me off like several are here. But here’s the thing, by the time the power spins everything between the crank and the rear wheel you lose about 17%. That imaginary 200 hp v-4 would put about 165 hp down at the rear wheel. Compared to the competition at the time that was making about 125-135. So call it 40 more hp than the competition. Now to put it into true perspective what makes a bicycle or motorcycle faster isn’t solely about hp, it’s the power to weight ratio, we all know the effect of a modestly lighter bicycle is right? So while the competition was pushing about 6.5 lbs per hp, my suggested bike would be pushing about 5.25 lbs per hp.
I wasn’t talking about doubling anything then, and I haven’t once suggested doubling anything here. My exact words were, “a little bit more” and I gave an example of I think 92 Nm vs 85 Nm. Not double. SO...does the technical course serious mtb guy want a bike that shaves a little more weight? If all other things are equal, strength, rigidity, etc. is a 50 lb version better than a 55 lb version of an emtb? That’s a small but probably noticeable improvement in power to weight ratio. As would be a few more Nm of torque.
Ultimately my point was really about the guy, I think he was from Specialized, that made the comment about no more power. He doesn’t know that’s what the market wants, he’s acting like that Polaris engineer thinking he knows what’s best for me. And as for me, I have discovered how much fun off road is. I want to do more although it will still be limited to the Midwest, probably never meet your definition of technical. And I use my bike for a lot more than that. I am part of this marketplace even if I don’t impress “serious mountain bike rider” and I do know what I want, he doesn’t.
BTW, a couple years after I was blown off by that engineer, BMW came out with a brand new six cylinder 170 hp touring bike. And it’s been selling extremely well ever since. Victory Motorcycles unfortunately is dead, they’ve been out of business since 2017.
So I have a curiosity question for you too. Does your emtb have a controller with power assist modes? You like your 85 Nm but if that’s too much for a technical course, can’t you just put it in eco? There’s another improvement I can think of. Instead of four power assist modes, what if that future bike with a little more power I mentioned came with a touchscreen TFT style dash and you select your power assist by Nm instead of 1 of 4 modes? Yeah this bike has 92 Nm available, and sometimes when you’re on flat courses you use it, but when you’re on something you call technical, you can dial up anything you want. 85, 71, 33, 12, oops make that 13 Nm....no reason technology can’t let you dial in exactly how much you want. Up to the maximum available of course.