New (e)bike day
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New (e)bike day
As some of you know, I'm a keen mountain biker. Nothing terribly gnarly and much prefer wheels on terra firma but nonetheless a frequent non-flyer of the trails around Peaslake with the occasional venture to Bikepark Wales, Antur Stiniog and the various trail centres in between.
I must admit that the last two and a half years have been quite barren on the MTB front, mainly because after nearly a decade of being single I actually got a girlfriend, moved in with her and am an unplanned step-dad. It further doesn't help that I live even further from my happy trails than I previously did (which wasn't particularly close).
I missed the trails quite a bit but I am lazy chubster and have never been particularly fit so didn't miss cycling up the hills. A 15 mile ride around Peaslake would have my knees and back throbbing to the point of taking ibuprofen and codeine for a couple of days.
I've been mulling over an e-mtb for a while and having hired one the last time I was at BPW cemented the idea, the problem was convincing myself it would be money well spent.
I got a really good, unexpected bonus from work this year and my girlfriend was happy with me treating myself so it was off to eBay. I lost out on a couple of Specialized Levos that I quite fancied but stumbled upon a Trek Powerfly 9.7 in my price range. The main spec is carbon frame, RockShox Yari fork, RockShoxDeluxe RL shock, SRAM NX gears, Shimano 4-pot brakes front and rear with dinner-plate sized discs, Bontrager XR4 tyres set up tubeless and the cherry of a Bosch Performance CX motor.
The suspension has 160mm of travel front and rear which is completely overkill unless I go to BPW (and even at my weight there are only a couple of trails where that much travel is beneficial to me).
(Apologies if the photos haven't uploaded, I'm still learning my way.)
The bike has marks you'd expect on a mountain bike, all but two of them are on the invisiframe/ One of the marks is on the fork bridge, the other is down by the motor. Otherwise it's immaculate and rides like it's new.
Took the bike to Peaslake today. It made the climbs so much easier as you'd expect. Slightly slower going down the way, the weight is noticeable, and I didn't want to charge down a trail I hadn't ridden in ages in case I came a cropper on an unknown-to-me jump or drop. Some people would say the weight makes the bike less fun but even on a regular mtb my weight dampens a lot of the pep. I couldn't tell if the 27.5 plus sized tyres gripped any better than the 'normal' 27.5 tyres on my Whyte T-130, they certainly weren't any worse and I suspect I'll push them a bit more as I get used to the bike. Both front and rear were set to 20psi. Can't comment on the suspension other than to say I'd set the sag at 25% front and rear which seemed to do a good job at keeping the wheels on the ground without jarring my hands when I battered my way through the roots. I only did 9.5 miles but felt like I could quite easily go further.
I don't know if heart rate is a good measure of effort but some anecdotal stat is that today's heart rate average was 120bpm whereas the same ride in 2016 on a regular e-mtb was only slightly higher at 125bmp. The motor obviously helps but you do have to put some effort in and on the tough technical climbs I was still breathless at the top, just not dying. I used eco mode on all but one climb.
Haven't had this much fun in ages. It's a lot of dosh for a toy but then so is a motorbike/going skiing/racing/so many other things.
*Edit - photos haven't uploaded.. Will work on that.
I must admit that the last two and a half years have been quite barren on the MTB front, mainly because after nearly a decade of being single I actually got a girlfriend, moved in with her and am an unplanned step-dad. It further doesn't help that I live even further from my happy trails than I previously did (which wasn't particularly close).
I missed the trails quite a bit but I am lazy chubster and have never been particularly fit so didn't miss cycling up the hills. A 15 mile ride around Peaslake would have my knees and back throbbing to the point of taking ibuprofen and codeine for a couple of days.
I've been mulling over an e-mtb for a while and having hired one the last time I was at BPW cemented the idea, the problem was convincing myself it would be money well spent.
I got a really good, unexpected bonus from work this year and my girlfriend was happy with me treating myself so it was off to eBay. I lost out on a couple of Specialized Levos that I quite fancied but stumbled upon a Trek Powerfly 9.7 in my price range. The main spec is carbon frame, RockShox Yari fork, RockShoxDeluxe RL shock, SRAM NX gears, Shimano 4-pot brakes front and rear with dinner-plate sized discs, Bontrager XR4 tyres set up tubeless and the cherry of a Bosch Performance CX motor.
The suspension has 160mm of travel front and rear which is completely overkill unless I go to BPW (and even at my weight there are only a couple of trails where that much travel is beneficial to me).
(Apologies if the photos haven't uploaded, I'm still learning my way.)
The bike has marks you'd expect on a mountain bike, all but two of them are on the invisiframe/ One of the marks is on the fork bridge, the other is down by the motor. Otherwise it's immaculate and rides like it's new.
Took the bike to Peaslake today. It made the climbs so much easier as you'd expect. Slightly slower going down the way, the weight is noticeable, and I didn't want to charge down a trail I hadn't ridden in ages in case I came a cropper on an unknown-to-me jump or drop. Some people would say the weight makes the bike less fun but even on a regular mtb my weight dampens a lot of the pep. I couldn't tell if the 27.5 plus sized tyres gripped any better than the 'normal' 27.5 tyres on my Whyte T-130, they certainly weren't any worse and I suspect I'll push them a bit more as I get used to the bike. Both front and rear were set to 20psi. Can't comment on the suspension other than to say I'd set the sag at 25% front and rear which seemed to do a good job at keeping the wheels on the ground without jarring my hands when I battered my way through the roots. I only did 9.5 miles but felt like I could quite easily go further.
I don't know if heart rate is a good measure of effort but some anecdotal stat is that today's heart rate average was 120bpm whereas the same ride in 2016 on a regular e-mtb was only slightly higher at 125bmp. The motor obviously helps but you do have to put some effort in and on the tough technical climbs I was still breathless at the top, just not dying. I used eco mode on all but one climb.
Haven't had this much fun in ages. It's a lot of dosh for a toy but then so is a motorbike/going skiing/racing/so many other things.
*Edit - photos haven't uploaded.. Will work on that.
- weeksy
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Re: New (e)bike day
I love your passion when you ride and it bemuses me you don't ride more. So this bike can only be a good thing!
We need a guided tour in the dry
We need a guided tour in the dry
- weeksy
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Re: New (e)bike day
When I'm out there, it's great fun and I really feel like I'm escaping the daily grind and worries, it's just getting the motivation together with time away from family that's a struggle. I need to find some trails closer to where I live tbh.
Happy to do a guided tour whenever you fancy it. Peaslake was quiet yesterday morning at 8.30am. Even at midday the main Walking Bottom car park was only 1/4 full.
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Re: New (e)bike day
Nice bike, you're fitter than me, I only use Eco on tarmac, mine spends most of it's time on Tour and most hills are tackled on Turbo.
Honda Owner
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Re: New (e)bike day
Thanks. To be fair, on yesterday's route the hardest climbs were on tarmac (though you could do them on fire roads). There was one particularly nasty climb (Gassons Farm on Strava) which I used Turbo for. It's only 0.16 mile long with an elevation increase of 136ft but the average gradient, according to Strava, is 16% and even in Turbo I was panting at the end.Julian_Boolean wrote: ↑Tue Jun 23, 2020 11:30 am Nice bike, you're fitter than me, I only use Eco on tarmac, mine spends most of it's time on Tour and most hills are tackled on Turbo.
- Mr Moofo
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Re: New (e)bike day
walking Bottom / Peaslake meeting could be on. I am now a lot fitter than I was ... but not Weeksy fit ...Beancounter wrote: ↑Tue Jun 23, 2020 9:52 amWhen I'm out there, it's great fun and I really feel like I'm escaping the daily grind and worries, it's just getting the motivation together with time away from family that's a struggle. I need to find some trails closer to where I live tbh.
Happy to do a guided tour whenever you fancy it. Peaslake was quiet yesterday morning at 8.30am. Even at midday the main Walking Bottom car park was only 1/4 full.
BTW there is now a big recall on Speciliazed Levo bikes - so good job you didn't get one!
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Re: New (e)bike day
There's a couple of short steepish climbs on my regular ride, I stick it in Turbo and just keep changing down gears until I reach a cadence I feel comfortable with, one of them is 1st gear on a DRZ400 btw, and slippery when wet.
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Re: New (e)bike day
It did seem like every Levo advert mentioned having the motor replaced and I must admit it was a concern but it also might explain why there are more Levos for sale than other comparable bikes.
All I need is a couple of days' notice to make sure I've no meetings but otherwise nothing in the diary that can't be avoided or bumped. You and Weeksy know how much I love going to Peaslake so would be a pleasure to show you around again.
There are a couple of new trails that I spotted yesterday but didn't get a chance to ride, I think the trail pixies have been busy whilst lockdown was in place. Even the braking bumps on Barry's have been smoothed out.
For the first hill I forgot to change down so came to a comedy standstill and would have fallen over had I not been using flats.Julian_Boolean wrote:There's a couple of short steepish climbs on my regular ride, I stick it in Turbo and just keep changing down gears until I reach a cadence I feel comfortable with, one of them is 1st gear on a DRZ400 btw, and slippery when wet.
Thanks, I'm well chuffed with it. I'd always steered away from Trek, Giant and Specialized, preferring something a bit different - my history is BMC, Commencal (courtesy of Weeksy) and Whyte. I'm a bit of a Whyte fanboi and my missus was encouraging me to buy one but my budget wouldn't have got me a Whyte of the same spec. First world problems.Nordboy wrote:
That's a very nice bit of kit. E-mtn bikes, bloody brilliant things.