I'm coming up on (1) year of riding the Pivot Shuttle SL XTR and I agree 100% it is blistering fast. All of my buddies I ride with have full fat bikes, unlocked Levos, and one is a Luna with 160nm bafang motor. All of them go beyond the 20mph limiter. On some of the climbs I have to work hard to keep up, but when we get to flat or downhill sections good luck catching me on the Shuttle. We got to the point where they always want me to go 1st on the downhills we ride lol. Amazing bike when used for the right purpose. The team at Pivot have been incredible to deal with on a couple small issues and I also got to meet the guys from Fazua and they have been super helpful with some tuning. My bike is a large and weighs 40.5 lbs ready to ride. Hard to beat, literally. Expensive but it was worth every penny in my opinion. Great review!
Great work on this series! I think this category is the gateway for those of use who started out on analogs but where life gets in the way of all day grind fests. For me, the ebike is a time machine, allowing more laps and more smiles. It also levels the playing field for those that are not as athletic. Not to feed into too much confirmation bias, but I bought a Relay PNW edition a few months ago after doing my own research and am so happy I did. You didn’t touch on my other use case for the Relay which is popping out the battery and hitting up the bike park. It’s so good!
As someone who owns the Orbea Rise and a Santa Cruz Hightower, I’m getting the Specialized Levo SL. I’ve ridden the new Heckler SL, the Pivot Shuttle SL, and the Levo. The Pivot is really light, but feels more trail than downhill. The Pivot is gorgeous in the desert sage color with Kashima coat. I was tempted to but it for the looks alone😂. The Heckler is nice, but honestly the Fazua system feels dull and seems to have a serious delay applying power. The Levo SL to me felt perfect. Just enough power help nicely with the climbs, but not so much that it sacrificed any playfulness downhill. The bike feels like a Porsche 911 on trails, and a Troohy truck downhill. A definite quiver killer.
Taking the rider's weight into consideration.....my 110lb girl rides the specialized levo SL mostly in eco(lowest) power, and kicks butt on the climbs. She refuses the high power settings as "uncontrollable" 😅
I would have loved the Relay but went for the Shuttle SL back in February as I really needed something to get me back out after illness, having to remove the battery also put me off a bit. Glad I made a good choice as it was my first real experience of e-bikes (other than a trial on the Forestal that backs up everything you said). So far the Shuttle has done everything I could want . Quick blast on Rocket to 40 miles on breeze, gentle trails to full on Lake District epics. I've watched all the videos in this group and they are spot on, keep them coming.
Thanks for this perfect video, 1 week ago I did buy the specialized turbo levo sl carbon 2023 with the new 1.2 motor. Got it for 7100 dollars my bike shop made me an offer i couldent say no to. Had the first ride on it last day. And what a play full bike, for me the power is more than enough and on the downhill Parts the bike feels so good.
Great series! At the rate of ebike launches you'll have to do another round up in 6 months. Maybe do a series capping it at $8-9k/bike? Keep up the great work!
I went with the 9.7 EXe. For myself, I wanted something that felt as close as possible to a regular bike, quiet, but that provided a little help. I might have checked into some other rides had this video come out before I jumped in, but I'm still pleased with the bike regardless. Thanks for putting this together, looking forward to future reviews.
@@JezDis1 I'm extremely happy with it. For me, it provides an excellent compromise between a full power e-bike and an acoustic bike, where I get just enough assist to make longer rides more enjoyable.
@@JezDis1 I love it. I ride it as much as I can, and only ride my regular bike about once a month or so as extra exercise. It's easily my favorite bike.
I have yet to break a chain on mine. I'm fairly confident most chains break because of shifting under load- and made even worse by the electric motor. Cycling and shifting fundamentals are essential for riding ebikes.
@@jmanswat2457 I have over 7,000 miles on my 2020 Specialized Turbo Levo and haven't ever broken a chain either. (4,300 miles on the original motor and 3,000 on replacement so far) I let off the pressure a bit before shifting. I have 2,000 miles on my SRAM XO 12 speed chain with no wear so far. I use Finishline Dry Lube on the chain after every ride if it's more than 20 miles. A lightweight ebike I'm interested in that is full power is the new Cannondale Moterra Carbon SL for $8,700. It's 43.4 lbs with a 600Wh battery and Shimano EP801 motor.
Great roundup! Still looking forward to an in depth on the Heckler SL. I was all in on the Relay, but the lower builds are too heavy. The Heckler SL seems to fit the bill on the build I want. Looking forward to your take.
Thats the problem with so many of these test bikes. They get sent the top spec and by the time you get the "average" persons build, they are 5 pounds heavier
Exceptional work guys. In producing these it must take so much time and patience (and insect repellent!) It's massively appreciated and great to watch. 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Had an older levo sl with less power. Loved the bike and hated the motor. Would consider a kenevo with newer motor. Thought about relay, but at 49 pounds, I should just get a levo expert. Thanks for showing, look forward to the show.
Love the honest reviews, as always. I totally understand about being split down the middle. I have been riding my Shuttle SL since December and my girlfriend has had her Fuel Exe since July of 2022. Sometimes we switch bikes and can agree that while each other's bike is pretty nice, we both chose the right bike for us. Worth mentioning, neither one of us has had any issues. I would consider the Transition for additional stability. But, I can accomplish that by throwing on a coil, when I need to. Mainly, I don't want to have to remove the battery to charge it. Thanks, again.
Watched & loved the whole series, now this final group review and just thumbs up! Nowhere did you mention (at least I didn’t catch it) the adjustability of the Nm on the Giant bike, it can be tuned down to 75Nm or 60Nm to save battery on longer days. I am a full size (fat) e-mtb owner looking to switch down into this newer SL category. Great series, thanks! 👍
Good review. All of these are great bikes. I did some testing of my own and was torn between the Giant and the Trek. I decided to go with the Giant for the price I paid, motor, and Live Valve suspension, which really seemed intriguing to me and couldn’t be happier. The versatility of the 85NM motor was what sold me, along with the great deal I got :-). It’s such a fun bike and as far as Live Valve is concerned, I think it’s a perfect match for this bike and once you get it dialed in and learn how to use it, it’s a fantastic system. No more forgetting to open the shock for the downhills like I sometimes do on my traditional pedal bikes :-) Shout out to The Path Bike Shop in OC, CA. Got my Giant there and the whole experience was awesome!
We have not bee blown away by many Giants, including in our recent eMTB Shootout, but this bike has us seriously considering a purchase! Props to them.
I Will be buying in this segment, possibly this fall. The decision will probably be between the Relay and Heckler SL. I have a Hightower and a Sentinel and assume some of the ride quality differences will extend to the e-bikes. The Sentinel is a clear winner in the gnar, but the Hightower is more balanced and what I’d choose for a long day of varied terrain. Both are great. I have a frame warranty issue starting with the Sentinel, and how Transition does or doesn’t handle it will probably be the deciding factor. The Shuttle SL would be a contender, but I can’t get past the steep-ish geometry, given the type of riding I’m going to be doing. I may still visit Tempe for a factory demo though.
Great shootout and love your picks! Having owned both the Relay and now the Fuel Exe I can attest to the pro's and con's of each and they are great bikes. One thing you kept mentioning about both bikes was the range extenders. With the Relay, its removable battery and how it charges, I am not sure there would be a way to attach a range extender as there is no external charging port. And Trek did a good bit of marketing by sending and extender with the test bike as they are on back order for all of US, with the only people getting them had ordered them a year AGO... The Fazua system to be the best in the shootout really needs a better display. When you're riding steep trails in the PNW the difference between knowing that one dot is either 19% or 1% is kind of a big deal
Scott Lumen seems to be for older riders (60+) that just stick to mellower trails, but could use the boost from the motor due to "getting older." I could see myself riding something like that once I'm retired. I probably won't be lapping jump lines or mega tech then. For all e-bikes I switched from full power (YT) to the Trek. The Trek provides "enough" power while remaining light and stealthy. I only want one bike and the Trek fits the bill for that. Cost is no objected I'd have a full power bike and an analog bike, but unfortunately cost is an object, so the mid-power bike covers most of the bases.
You might be surprised. I’m 67 and still love the tech and jump lines. The Lumen doesn’t interest me at all. The Transition would be my pick. I own a Fuel Exe with a 160 fork. A great bike but could use slightly more power.
Great review! Good to see you made adjustments to some of the the bikes power settings to get the best out of the bikes. Some manufacturer settings are a detriment to the proformance of the bikes for sure.
I'm probably correct in thinking that this is the first group review of half fat ebikes and a job well done.👏 And if anymore proof was needed that the Loam Wolf is impartial, a specialized didn't get top honours!👍
Thank you very much and we're also thinking it may have been the first ever lightweight eMTB Group Test! Which we're excited about. And we appreciate the kind words. We try our best to be as impartial and honest as we possibly can!
I don't have an emtb YET, but I want a lightweight lower power emtb. Rode an Orbea Rise M20 in Bentonville for two days, and it really opened my eyes to the whole 'lightweight emtb' thing - can actually bunny hop it!
Yeah, the light ebikes are great. I been riding full fat since 2019 and really enjoy the full power, but they are a bit cumbersome and hefty. But I recently demoed and subsequently bought the Giant Trance Elite. Like the award says, it really is the best of both worlds! Lightness, agility, and the fun of a lighter bike without having to sacrifice the alluring power of a full fat. I looove it!!!
It would be really handy if you discussed the motors in a bit more detail. I used to have a Shimano EP8 powered e-bike and I really disliked how the power cut out really quickly at higher cadences. From memory I think it was any cadance over like 110rpm, the power would cut out completely which was horrible when you were going from a descent to a sudden climb and you shifted down to a lower gear pre-emptively so that when you hit the steep climb you could blast the cadance in a lower gear to get up the climb without losing too much speed with with the EP8 if I did this the motor would just go dead and would take way too long to kick back in so I would just lose all of my momentum. It was a horrible motor in that regard. It was quite torquey but didn't like high cadance so I think the EP8 was better suited to a lazy or old rider who wanted to just grind along at low cadance and let the bike do the work. I switched to the Bosch Gen 4 and it is SO much better. You can go up to insane cadance and the motor just keeps pushing. It really makes the experience that much better when you can blast a higher cadance for a couple of seconds in those scenarios and the motor is happy to comply. If I test rode any of these other motors and found that they behaved like the EP8 then it would be crossed off the list of potential purchases immediately.
This was a great series! Please do an in-depth series on lower cost bikes. I work at a Giant and Pivot dealer and can say that the Shuttle SL is excellent here in Minnesota where we do not have big climbs. Im sure the Giant would be excellent too BUT these are expensive bikes and many of us want a reasonably capable bike for much less money.
Got a Relay on order for nest year. Can't wait! I do wish more brands made light EMTBs with removable battery though. Saves one from having both a E-bike and a meat-bike.
After watching this review several times I still feel you GUYS some times do not get some of the SL bikes positives. Full power bikes are TOO heavy for 90+% of women. How about rounding up a gaggle of girls and have them do the SL review! My wife would not be able to lift a 55lb bike on to her bike rack. Love the vids by the way.
Coming from a stumpjumper evo and canyon torque:on cf8, I'm looking at a lightweight to eliminate the other 2 all together. From personal experience, I feel like 60nm tq and 38-48lb is the sweet spot... Any more torque and mtb tires hold you back. More weight and brakes become more an issue. The giant is the future... tunable power with more compact and efficient battery cells.
Without trying them, I was choosing between the Transition Relay and Propain Ekano and ended up with the Ekano. Would be epic to see a shootout between the Relay and the new Heckler SL :) Thanks for an epic video but, very entertaining and well put together compared to many other mtb shootouts.
I agree with the bar/stem combo complaints. Great pointing out the chain weaknesses - any chains worth mentioning? I'm impressed with the Transition Relay (the base model) so much that I'm considering that over a Transition Patrol. The less expensive Trek and Levo SL might be runner-up options.
I believe a key point for the SL ebikes that wasn't fully appreciated (or highly scored) here was weight and noise of the motor. The point of SL's is to be the closest Mt bike experience without it feeling like a motorcycle. To me this disqualifies the Giant entirely because of its 80nm motor. After some custom tuning I think most will find 55nm of torque to be plenty of power. I love how quiet my fuel exe is! Although that might come at the expense of efficiency (when compared to the pivot shuttle sl, which my friend has, Shuttle seems to get better range). I will also say that even with electric assistance, linkage and frame suspension kinematics still matter- which lends to the bikes perceived "speed". I can still tell the difference between my fuel exe and previously owned pivots. I will be getting a Pivot again in the future.
Very different due to the travel and plus feeling suspension of the Transition vs the Heckler SL. We've not had enough time on Heckler SL, which is a very fun bike, but let's just say since we're not the biggest VPP suspension fans, it wouldn't have taken away the awards given for most of our crew. Still a rad and playful bike and in the right terrain, it rips!
Great review! As e-bike user my go to bike is Trek Rail and first think is getting rid of bar combo (worst thing ever). Once you try full power e-bike then you never want to go back to SL.
Fantastic video, really appreciate all the thought and time put into this! However, I'm constantly frustrated when bike reviews are on team or top of the line packages. A $14k bike is not in the budget for 99% of people, so ultimately this video wasn't that helpful. Would love to see videos focused on models your audience can actually afford and would be interested in!
Great good guys!! I have a turbo levo gen 3 looking for a Sl and going probably on the light side. Going to be probably looking more with the fazua stuff it looks like better unite I think. Thanks for making my life easier.
The best thing these bikes do is help people with health conditions. I am type one diabetic, and the power saves me when my blood sugar is crashing and I need to keep up with friend on non-ebikes. I have a big full-power, I am going down to an SL as I want the feel of an analog, but enough power in an emergency when pedaling too hard. This review helped. However, please god review the lower levels of these models. This applies to the 1% of bike consumers...
I've had the Specialized Levo SL 2023 for a few months now. Did a ton of research. Its a fantastic bike for 90% of things. As for the power comments... I think these guys are getting old and fat :) I'm 5'10", 185lbs and think Trail mode is cheating. :) That being said, I wanted a bike that didn't look like an e-bike. Only a couple of the bikes in this list fit that bill. My buddy has the Trek. The Trek is more stealthy / quieter, but has a bit less battery efficiency / range compared to the Specialized. If you want a super light, playful, fun, and poppy light e-bike that doesn't look like an e-bike, the Specialized is perfect. I can get ~30 miles on my local trails WITHOUT the range extender. I, personally, think it climbs super easily on Trail mode.... I don't even use the Power/Boost mode.
I’m looking at switching from a full power or should I say a full weight e-bike to an SL. I have a cube stereo hybrid 160 which is great when you take it into the hills where the chunky stuff is but most of my riding is pretty flat trails. I’m pretty fit and don’t need 85nm of torque with 700wh plus battery. I ride my cube in Eco mostly and have the torque set to 45nm. On steeper longer climbs I will move up to Tour+ which I have set at 60nm. Personally I think the biggest issue with full power e-bikes is that here in the UK, they are limited to 15.5mph. This is too low. It’s too easy to hit the limit on the flat and also on some gradients. You then feel the weight of the bike and it spoils the fun. I think an SL at around 19kg would feel a bit more lively and be less of a drag when you hit that limiter.
I didn’t like the one piece handlebars at first but they grew on my over time, now I really like them, however I wouldn’t pay that much for a set of handlebars (mine came with the bike).
Great job! I would love to see you guys time and do a 2-3k+ climb on them, as well as a short one. It would help reveal durability and engineering quality, imo.
Great comparison guys nice job, can’t help but feel that if the trek fuel exe if only the tq motor put out 60nm of torque and had slightly large battery to accommodate the extra power it would be a no brained with the near silent operation of the tq motor
@@Maxi_Maxthe guys don't like normal bikes or SL ebikes... they've said it again and again, in almost every video. They ride dirtbikes so, the big ebikes are a natural extension for them.
That’s right. To unlock the full potential, the power settings need to be bumped up in the app. Under controlled hill climb tests, the Levo SL has been as fast or faster than the 60 nm bikes.
I rode a full power ebike for a couple years and am curious how many of you would trade in your full power ebike for a lightweight and why? Thanks for the great content
Very tough call... With a range extender it's getting to be a closer decision but still a very tough one! I think its very much rider dependent but we think 75% of our crew will keep a good full power bike as of right now. 630-700 battery is great.
@@TheLoamWolf Is that due to how much longer the battery lasts or the extra power it puts out? I've never ridden full powers or SL's so i'm trying to gauge which direction to go.
@Isaac, it depends if you feel as and want to be a mtb-er. If you like the spirit and ethos of mtb-ing. If you want that in your life then, you'll like SL ebikes. If you don't care and all you want is big power uphill and big squishy on the downs, don't bother and keep your full fat ebike.
full fat ebike are for knobs and for poser mtb-ers. The only thing they have in common with mtb-ing are the terrain in which the activity takes place. On real mtb trails, fat ebikes are awkward and cumbersome to manoeuvre, give you a heavy and heavily inertial feel and feedback and, on real mtb down the hill trails, fat mtbs are slower than SL ebikes and normal bikes as well; basically, slow full fat ebikes for slow full fat knob riders. (in 99% of the cases)
@@eugenux Who said anything about fat-tire ebike ? All though I have one and have a blast on it in the snow and on the beach, I have two main ebikes I ride all the time. I love my POLE VOIMA and GIANT TRANCE…. and neither are fat-tire bikes. Thanks for your reply
@@apatriotofhopedanjohn4781all ebikes bar the SLs are fat(i.e. heavy) and ride like shi.te..., when you compare them with SLs and, especially, with normal bikes.
I'm partial to the Giant Trance Elite (because I bought one!) but I knew it wasn't going to win best overall. However, I'm glad you guys basically created a whole new award just as a recognition for how significant it was for Giant to have created it. There's no other bike like it right now, and I love that there are very few sacrifices to make with the Trance Elite. Lightweight AND full power? AND range extender while still being lighter than every 'full fat' ebike? so much WIN
@@techne9992 There's not a universal standard or definition, and not every manufacturer goes by the 'SL' term... So it's whatever the hell you want it to be. As far as the Giant goes... It's certainly not the lightest, but most people would consider a 44lb, full-powered ebike to be pretty light. Also, Giant's website claims the Trance Elite 0 is 41 pounds in a size medium. I don't know if the Loam Wolf guys weighed their size L bike with a scale, but there's that.
I love these group tests, in depth reviews, slick video 👍 I have the H15 orbea with the Cascade 150mm link on pre order together with a 160 mm fork upgrade, it should make a great bike even better. This new crop of bikes just keep getting better. I’d take the Pivot so or the Transition 🤙🤙
I love your guys reviews. My only critique is that you test the highest end version of every bike. No one is buying those ones. I wish you would get the mid version of each one. If you buy a 10+ thousand bike in 2023 you are doing it wrong.
Unfortunately it’s all about what the companies send them. They all end up sending them their high end stuff. Pinkbike has talked about it in depth on their podcast
The problem with mid price comparison is the mixed bag of where costs were cut, one will have better brakes, the next better suspension etc. If it's all top spec then the review is about the frame and the part of the bike that won't get changed. Mid level reviews often end up describing which component ended up being the limit of the bike's performance, I can't stand them.
@Nugemart LOL, I think you mean a delayed response to an unusual spike in demand. I'm not aware of any industry that comes close to the level of customer focus and passion for the sport mountain biking has.
Great vid! I bought the Relay on the back of this. Great bike. But the ring controller/remote is SUCH SUCH a disappointment!!! I’m on my second under warranty (1 split opened and the other just stopped working). Fazua have to sort this out! It’s spoiling an otherwise excellent bike!
Really good review thanks guys. You have helped me limit my choice to the Giant or the Transition. I read that the Giant had an annoying habit of resetting the power settings after each ride. Do you know if this has been rectified?
@@RealDriver8 From what I understand, the stock settings are somewhat detuned to maximize the battery. You're not getting 100 % boost unless you go into the settings.
They did not give us the bike in time for this group review. However we will be riding it more to get some impressions beyond our First Ride thoughts and try to reference it to other bikes here.
Great round up, respect the giant, but it is a full power eMTB at 85 nM bike so not sure it should be in this test, but you guys are the experts. Would have liked to know what you thought the range performances were, good or bad, and would like to see where the giant would sit here.
Two main consumer criteria not mentioned in this group. 1) Is it going to be your only bike ? One bike to shred everything or another horse in the stable. This is defining for this category for myself and most of my riding buddies. 2) rider weight Even acknowledging the different power and torque measurements there is some cutofff where lower power struggles based on rider weight. This category is straddling the “just enough” so it would be good to see rider weights. At 160# in not and wet through I’m happy on 60nm riding with full power bikes but my 220# riding buddy has a completely different experience To be honest I can feel the difference between 60nm and 85nm but it’s not really translated into riding whereas someone much heavier even if they are fit it will be a completely different experience I think this combines with #1 ^^ I’m sure the transition would be ideal for me especially the other criteria I have with removable battery but not for my bigger riding buddy Another mate slightly heavier (maybe another 10#) has a kenevo sl and a turbo levo .. we do different rides when he’s on the SL We all own multiple bikes but only 1 has 2x emtb and I ride my emtb less than 1/2 the time but when I do I want to know I’m on an ebike especially those after work rides and just pack everything in.
@@stephenlord599 I had pulled the trigger on the fazua powered e bike as I wanted a lightweight less than 20 kg bike, very happy with what I have although a full powered passed me the other day, but dont we hate show offs. My bike performs brilliantly so no issues, just have to put some work in to keep right up with the full fats.
I love that you have a lightweight shoot out to compliment the full power. On my end, in no way am I purchasing any of the most expensive of any brands bike, so I am looking for bang for the buck. Some of the hold ups in some of the bikes seem to be limited to the Top end bike (live valve, one piece bar/stem) so I am curious as who the "lightweight emtb overall winner" would be for those in the $7-$8k range. I currently have a 2019 Rocky Mountain Instinct PP. With the chain breaks, were lightweight chains in use? I am curious if it was decided to put lighter more expensive changes that would work great on an XC bike but not good for the e-bike.
Road biker here. I train on a turbo trainer and just bought a Levo SL to be able to get out on the trails without loading up the legs with additional fatigue and ruining my training gains. Also want the bike to be easy to load into the car to take it to a bike park every once in a while. Also, my friends don't train and ride manual bikes, so I figure I can turn the motor off when I ride with them to give myself a bit of a handicap.
I have ridden my Levo SL 70% of the time with the power turned off (riding it with friends), and turn it on when I need it. It was stolen recently and I am deciding what to go with next!
great video to watch. the pivot looks awesome shame theres no display, the trek looks awesome but needs 60n, big shame about the forestal but that will teach them for a 15000 euro price tag here in the uk. great content guys
Great stuff! …sounds like if the Transition Relay with it’s travel, and the Giant “Long Name” with its power, had a baby, That’d be the perfect EMTB!🤔😜
Very cool to see this market expand, but a bit dismayed that there are no real choices that provide geo/stand-over/weight that would work for shorter riders (under 5'5"), even from Liv. It would be great to see the market go back to 27.5" wheels to make smaller eMTBs more functional for that demographic.
Question… if one was to throw a 160mm air-spring in the Pivot SL 36, and play with volume spacers, do y’all think that would be a more balanced ride? Get down into the 64.5 HTA in the low setting. The fork not keeping up with the rear end seemed to be the biggest hang-up in the review. I’m about to pull the trigger on that bike but I hate feeling under-forked. Thanks for the great series fellas.
Thanks very much. It would certainly slacken out the front end a hair and give a more aggressive front end! That combined with some burly casing, high volume rear tire and you'd have a killer machine but ultimately, nothing will make up for rear wheel travel! As amazing as the Pivot is, it still only has 132mm of travel, BUT that is plenty enough for a lot of riders, so if that's you, then get after it! Hope that helps.
May I recommend including an older rider in the test group ,@59 and 35+ years of mt. biking I am looking to extend my rides and an e-bike is the solution for us older riders. To have a perspective from an older rider would greatly benefit our buying decision. Ty
First off, absoloutely awesome series. A question: Thoughts on which bike would be best to ride with non-ebikes? I have many friends/family who don't ride as often and would prefer to be on a lightweight e bike for a bit of a boost when coming on 'acoustic' pedals? They don't need max power output, just looking for a small boost. A quiet motor would probably be a major asset, not directly advertising to the rest of the group the situation.
Thank you! The TQ and Fazua are certainly quietest bikes in the mix. HOwever the Fazua we rode in the new Santa Cruz was a bit louder than the Pivot Shuttle and Transition.
Thanks Drew. Awesome content as always. Drew, couples of observations/questions: 1. Big range of bike styles ie lumen v relay. The relay is really e enduro bike. Would habeen cool to see SL enduro shootout, or are there not enough in that category for it's own shootout? 2. Would the heckler SL have won this shootout if it had been ready in time for inclusion do you think!? 3. Do you know if SC will make a 170/170 SL like the nomad/megatower? Thanks heaps Drew. You should have 500k subscribers!!
Thank you very much! We’ll keep these pointed responses here - 1 that is correct. We think more bikes will be coming in the future but as of now, this was all we could get. 2 no it would not have. 3. We’re not sure but we can sure hope! It would make sense. But we’d be much for stoked if the Shuttle SL came in an LT!!
Ok so you guys aren't fans of the VPP. I've never ridden one but right now it's between the Relay & Santa Cruz, maybe the Pivot. Worried about that 132mm rear end not being enough. I've looked up the VPP in some of your old videos and just on google trying to understand it better. I see mentions of uphills on sharp rocks and brake bumps it being rough or bouncing before catching (your full power Heckler review). We ride Moab A LOT so I'm familiar with the terrain there for an example, lots of rocks, uphill and downhill, sharp edges. Also Brake bumps ripping through berms in DH parks. How would a VPP suspension on the Heckler SL in theory handle in these environments? We do like smooth trails as well but need a bike to ride it all. Thanks a bunch
Thanks very much and you kinda nailed it there. Every suspension platform has pros and cons. Like anything in life, there is a give and take. VPP drawbacks are noted most on fast, square-edge hits, comfort and it's hangup. This causes deceleration slightly, fatigue, feedback and reduced traction to varying extents. We very much wish the Shuttle SL had more travel or an LT version was also available, maybe one day?? Coil shocks can help VPPs feel better and why many sponsored athletes of VPP brands run coils. We've had conversations with lots of pro athletes over the years. The Heckler SL can run a coil and could be an option... Relay is a sick all around platform and there is a reason we all chose it as the winner, and bike we'd most likely buy. Hope that helps. Drew
I’d be interested to know the weight of you guys. Just as I have a Kenevo sl with less power than all these and don’t feel like it’s underpowered at all. I ride in trail 60% power -100% support most of the time. Only the steeper climbs I put it in turbo. But do only weigh 70kg, I feel a lot of these sl E bikes struggle when heavier riders use them.
Relay, one comment, if the battery charge port is inside the frame, how will a range extender work on this bike (once released)? Personally I view a RE as a "must-have" for this ebike category.
Another decent review, thanks LW team. I believe these imposter/ebike lite/SL e-bikes are basically what we should expect emtb's in the near future. We will have lower weight bikes, with full power availability in an SL form factor, along with modular battery options to suit the rider's needs. There wont be a need to make a bike that is in between analog and and power assist, just a high quality emtb that allows it be setup based on the rider's desired experience. There is no reason we can't have a silent TQ sized motor with a sleek downtube, with a minimalist cockpit, that provides about a 700w peak/90+ ft/lbs of assist. That said..... I would like to see more info and demo's of all the "apps" and integration available in these type's of reviews, along with a deeper dive into the calibration possibilities that they offer. I don't think we can just ignore this aspect anymore and say whatever, the default settings are gtg and this is just how the bike rides. A "good" or properly configured calibration for a rider, can be the difference between loving and hating a bike.
On the questions asked: yes one-piece bar/stem setups need to go, along with integrated cables. On the chain issue, we need to look at possibly less gears and bigger beefier chains found on a 9-10 speed, or better yet internal gearbox, with belt drives possibly.
I'm coming up on (1) year of riding the Pivot Shuttle SL XTR and I agree 100% it is blistering fast. All of my buddies I ride with have full fat bikes, unlocked Levos, and one is a Luna with 160nm bafang motor. All of them go beyond the 20mph limiter. On some of the climbs I have to work hard to keep up, but when we get to flat or downhill sections good luck catching me on the Shuttle. We got to the point where they always want me to go 1st on the downhills we ride lol. Amazing bike when used for the right purpose. The team at Pivot have been incredible to deal with on a couple small issues and I also got to meet the guys from Fazua and they have been super helpful with some tuning. My bike is a large and weighs 40.5 lbs ready to ride. Hard to beat, literally. Expensive but it was worth every penny in my opinion. Great review!
Far too expensive.
Thank You for doing this.
All the stress and work is worth it thanks to awesome comments and supporters like you! We appreciate it.
How would the new Santa Cruz Heckler SL compare to the top bikes you had (the Trek, Pivot, and Transition)? Thanks!
This is what I was hoping to hear about as well. Hopefully they release a video that addresses this soon.
Great work on this series! I think this category is the gateway for those of use who started out on analogs but where life gets in the way of all day grind fests. For me, the ebike is a time machine, allowing more laps and more smiles. It also levels the playing field for those that are not as athletic. Not to feed into too much confirmation bias, but I bought a Relay PNW edition a few months ago after doing my own research and am so happy I did. You didn’t touch on my other use case for the Relay which is popping out the battery and hitting up the bike park. It’s so good!
As someone who owns the Orbea Rise and a Santa Cruz Hightower, I’m getting the Specialized Levo SL. I’ve ridden the new Heckler SL, the Pivot Shuttle SL, and the Levo. The Pivot is really light, but feels more trail than downhill. The Pivot is gorgeous in the desert sage color with Kashima coat. I was tempted to but it for the looks alone😂. The Heckler is nice, but honestly the Fazua system feels dull and seems to have a serious delay applying power. The Levo SL to me felt perfect. Just enough power help nicely with the climbs, but not so much that it sacrificed any playfulness downhill. The bike feels like a Porsche 911 on trails, and a Troohy truck downhill. A definite quiver killer.
Thanks for sharing. We appreciate your input.
Taking the rider's weight into consideration.....my 110lb girl rides the specialized levo SL mostly in eco(lowest) power, and kicks butt on the climbs. She refuses the high power settings as "uncontrollable" 😅
This really cements my opinion of the transition as my next bike. Thank you guys so much for doing this shootout!
I would have loved the Relay but went for the Shuttle SL back in February as I really needed something to get me back out after illness, having to remove the battery also put me off a bit. Glad I made a good choice as it was my first real experience of e-bikes (other than a trial on the Forestal that backs up everything you said). So far the Shuttle has done everything I could want . Quick blast on Rocket to 40 miles on breeze, gentle trails to full on Lake District epics. I've watched all the videos in this group and they are spot on, keep them coming.
Thank you very much and stoked to hear that you like the Shuttle SL! It's a rad bike.
Thanks for this perfect video, 1 week ago I did buy the specialized turbo levo sl carbon 2023 with the new 1.2 motor. Got it for 7100 dollars my bike shop made me an offer i couldent say no to. Had the first ride on it last day. And what a play full bike, for me the power is more than enough and on the downhill Parts the bike feels so good.
Great to hear! Congrats and enjoy your new bike.
Any thoughts on how the Santa Cruz Heckler SL would have done in this shootout? Too bad it wasn’t released in time to make it into this comparison.
It would’ve won.
Great series! At the rate of ebike launches you'll have to do another round up in 6 months. Maybe do a series capping it at $8-9k/bike? Keep up the great work!
We are thinking of that for next year! It'll be rad to see how they perform.
Full power is a handful on really steep, tight tech. Thinking about going down to an SL.
Awesome video and literally covered just about every popular motor. Congrats Transition!!!! They make the best bikes hands down.
My Relay is finally coming next week ! Great vids Guys. You just assured me that I’ve made good choice ordering Relay back in February. Cheers 👍😀
I went with the 9.7 EXe. For myself, I wanted something that felt as close as possible to a regular bike, quiet, but that provided a little help. I might have checked into some other rides had this video come out before I jumped in, but I'm still pleased with the bike regardless.
Thanks for putting this together, looking forward to future reviews.
How you liking the 9.7, I'm looking at those as well.
@@JezDis1 I'm extremely happy with it. For me, it provides an excellent compromise between a full power e-bike and an acoustic bike, where I get just enough assist to make longer rides more enjoyable.
@@JezDis1 I love it. I ride it as much as I can, and only ride my regular bike about once a month or so as extra exercise. It's easily my favorite bike.
Owning a 2020 SC Heckler and pre-ordered a Heckler SL now… I‘m so ready for a lighter ebike! ❤
The chain discussion gets me even more excited about the gearbox ebikes with belt drives.
I have yet to break a chain on mine. I'm fairly confident most chains break because of shifting under load- and made even worse by the electric motor. Cycling and shifting fundamentals are essential for riding ebikes.
@@jmanswat2457 I have over 7,000 miles on my 2020 Specialized Turbo Levo and haven't ever broken a chain either. (4,300 miles on the original motor and 3,000 on replacement so far) I let off the pressure a bit before shifting. I have 2,000 miles on my SRAM XO 12 speed chain with no wear so far. I use Finishline Dry Lube on the chain after every ride if it's more than 20 miles.
A lightweight ebike I'm interested in that is full power is the new Cannondale Moterra Carbon SL for $8,700. It's 43.4 lbs with a 600Wh battery and Shimano EP801 motor.
Great roundup! Still looking forward to an in depth on the Heckler SL. I was all in on the Relay, but the lower builds are too heavy. The Heckler SL seems to fit the bill on the build I want. Looking forward to your take.
Ditto. Word for word my exact thoughts.
Thats the problem with so many of these test bikes. They get sent the top spec and by the time you get the "average" persons build, they are 5 pounds heavier
Exceptional work guys. In producing these it must take so much time and patience (and insect repellent!)
It's massively appreciated and great to watch. 👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Thank you very much! And yes. We got 6 stings during the week! Not fun haha.
Had an older levo sl with less power. Loved the bike and hated the motor. Would consider a kenevo with newer motor. Thought about relay, but at 49 pounds, I should just get a levo expert. Thanks for showing, look forward to the show.
Even my 35Nm KSL has allowed me as a family man to hit trails more often and still be home to cook dinner.
Love the honest reviews, as always. I totally understand about being split down the middle. I have been riding my Shuttle SL since December and my girlfriend has had her Fuel Exe since July of 2022. Sometimes we switch bikes and can agree that while each other's bike is pretty nice, we both chose the right bike for us. Worth mentioning, neither one of us has had any issues. I would consider the Transition for additional stability. But, I can accomplish that by throwing on a coil, when I need to. Mainly, I don't want to have to remove the battery to charge it. Thanks, again.
Awesome thank you so much!
Watched & loved the whole series, now this final group review and just thumbs up!
Nowhere did you mention (at least I didn’t catch it) the adjustability of the Nm on the Giant bike, it can be tuned down to 75Nm or 60Nm to save battery on longer days.
I am a full size (fat) e-mtb owner looking to switch down into this newer SL category.
Great series, thanks! 👍
Thanks and good point! It may have actually been in there and gotten edited out of the already long round table of rants. haha. But good point!
Good review. All of these are great bikes. I did some testing of my own and was torn between the Giant and the Trek. I decided to go with the Giant for the price I paid, motor, and Live Valve suspension, which really seemed intriguing to me and couldn’t be happier. The versatility of the 85NM motor was what sold me, along with the great deal I got :-). It’s such a fun bike and as far as Live Valve is concerned, I think it’s a perfect match for this bike and once you get it dialed in and learn how to use it, it’s a fantastic system. No more forgetting to open the shock for the downhills like I sometimes do on my traditional pedal bikes :-) Shout out to The Path Bike Shop in OC, CA. Got my Giant there and the whole experience was awesome!
Thanks so much for sharing and we’re stoked to hear you are loving the new bike.
I think the story here is the Giant. After bringing so many subpar to average bikes to market, they produce this ripper. I'm sold.
We have not bee blown away by many Giants, including in our recent eMTB Shootout, but this bike has us seriously considering a purchase! Props to them.
I Will be buying in this segment, possibly this fall. The decision will probably be between the Relay and Heckler SL. I have a Hightower and a Sentinel and assume some of the ride quality differences will extend to the e-bikes. The Sentinel is a clear winner in the gnar, but the Hightower is more balanced and what I’d choose for a long day of varied terrain. Both are great. I have a frame warranty issue starting with the Sentinel, and how Transition does or doesn’t handle it will probably be the deciding factor. The Shuttle SL would be a contender, but I can’t get past the steep-ish geometry, given the type of riding I’m going to be doing. I may still visit Tempe for a factory demo though.
Knowing nothing about light e mountain bikes, the presentation and content of this video was excellent. I learned a lot. Thanks guys!
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching.
Great shootout and love your picks! Having owned both the Relay and now the Fuel Exe I can attest to the pro's and con's of each and they are great bikes.
One thing you kept mentioning about both bikes was the range extenders. With the Relay, its removable battery and how it charges, I am not sure there would be a way to attach a range extender as there is no external charging port. And Trek did a good bit of marketing by sending and extender with the test bike as they are on back order for all of US, with the only people getting them had ordered them a year AGO...
The Fazua system to be the best in the shootout really needs a better display. When you're riding steep trails in the PNW the difference between knowing that one dot is either 19% or 1% is kind of a big deal
Scott Lumen seems to be for older riders (60+) that just stick to mellower trails, but could use the boost from the motor due to "getting older." I could see myself riding something like that once I'm retired. I probably won't be lapping jump lines or mega tech then. For all e-bikes I switched from full power (YT) to the Trek. The Trek provides "enough" power while remaining light and stealthy. I only want one bike and the Trek fits the bill for that. Cost is no objected I'd have a full power bike and an analog bike, but unfortunately cost is an object, so the mid-power bike covers most of the bases.
You might be surprised. I’m 67 and still love the tech and jump lines. The Lumen doesn’t interest me at all. The Transition would be my pick. I own a Fuel Exe with a 160 fork. A great bike but could use slightly more power.
Great review! Good to see you made adjustments to some of the the bikes power settings to get the best out of the bikes. Some manufacturer settings are a detriment to the proformance of the bikes for sure.
I'm probably correct in thinking that this is the first group review of half fat ebikes and a job well done.👏 And if anymore proof was needed that the Loam Wolf is impartial, a specialized didn't get top honours!👍
Thank you very much and we're also thinking it may have been the first ever lightweight eMTB Group Test! Which we're excited about.
And we appreciate the kind words. We try our best to be as impartial and honest as we possibly can!
I don't have an emtb YET, but I want a lightweight lower power emtb. Rode an Orbea Rise M20 in Bentonville for two days, and it really opened my eyes to the whole 'lightweight emtb' thing - can actually bunny hop it!
Yeah, the light ebikes are great. I been riding full fat since 2019 and really enjoy the full power, but they are a bit cumbersome and hefty. But I recently demoed and subsequently bought the Giant Trance Elite. Like the award says, it really is the best of both worlds! Lightness, agility, and the fun of a lighter bike without having to sacrifice the alluring power of a full fat. I looove it!!!
Cool - one thing they never mention is that you actually have to lift the dang thing into a bike rack or truck!@@jasper_of_puppets
It would be really handy if you discussed the motors in a bit more detail. I used to have a Shimano EP8 powered e-bike and I really disliked how the power cut out really quickly at higher cadences. From memory I think it was any cadance over like 110rpm, the power would cut out completely which was horrible when you were going from a descent to a sudden climb and you shifted down to a lower gear pre-emptively so that when you hit the steep climb you could blast the cadance in a lower gear to get up the climb without losing too much speed with with the EP8 if I did this the motor would just go dead and would take way too long to kick back in so I would just lose all of my momentum. It was a horrible motor in that regard. It was quite torquey but didn't like high cadance so I think the EP8 was better suited to a lazy or old rider who wanted to just grind along at low cadance and let the bike do the work. I switched to the Bosch Gen 4 and it is SO much better. You can go up to insane cadance and the motor just keeps pushing. It really makes the experience that much better when you can blast a higher cadance for a couple of seconds in those scenarios and the motor is happy to comply. If I test rode any of these other motors and found that they behaved like the EP8 then it would be crossed off the list of potential purchases immediately.
This has to be the best light weight MTB round up ever done on you tube Loam Wolf rule ❤ LET'S GO
Thank you very much! We appreciate you.
This was a great series! Please do an in-depth series on lower cost bikes. I work at a Giant and Pivot dealer and can say that the Shuttle SL is excellent here in Minnesota where we do not have big climbs. Im sure the Giant would be excellent too BUT these are expensive bikes and many of us want a reasonably capable bike for much less money.
Great suggestion! We will work on that for sure!
Got a Relay on order for nest year. Can't wait! I do wish more brands made light EMTBs with removable battery though. Saves one from having both a E-bike and a meat-bike.
After watching this review several times I still feel you GUYS some times do not get some of the SL bikes positives.
Full power bikes are TOO heavy for 90+% of women. How about rounding up a gaggle of girls and have them do the SL review!
My wife would not be able to lift a 55lb bike on to her bike rack.
Love the vids by the way.
Coming from a stumpjumper evo and canyon torque:on cf8, I'm looking at a lightweight to eliminate the other 2 all together. From personal experience, I feel like 60nm tq and 38-48lb is the sweet spot... Any more torque and mtb tires hold you back. More weight and brakes become more an issue. The giant is the future... tunable power with more compact and efficient battery cells.
Without trying them, I was choosing between the Transition Relay and Propain Ekano and ended up with the Ekano. Would be epic to see a shootout between the Relay and the new Heckler SL :) Thanks for an epic video but, very entertaining and well put together compared to many other mtb shootouts.
Thank you very much!
I agree with the bar/stem combo complaints. Great pointing out the chain weaknesses - any chains worth mentioning? I'm impressed with the Transition Relay (the base model) so much that I'm considering that over a Transition Patrol. The less expensive Trek and Levo SL might be runner-up options.
We've had great luck with KMC chains so far.
I believe a key point for the SL ebikes that wasn't fully appreciated (or highly scored) here was weight and noise of the motor. The point of SL's is to be the closest Mt bike experience without it feeling like a motorcycle. To me this disqualifies the Giant entirely because of its 80nm motor. After some custom tuning I think most will find 55nm of torque to be plenty of power. I love how quiet my fuel exe is! Although that might come at the expense of efficiency (when compared to the pivot shuttle sl, which my friend has, Shuttle seems to get better range).
I will also say that even with electric assistance, linkage and frame suspension kinematics still matter- which lends to the bikes perceived "speed". I can still tell the difference between my fuel exe and previously owned pivots. I will be getting a Pivot again in the future.
If you guys love the Relay, you should REALLY try the PNW version. It's everything you said and then some!
Thank you for reaffirming my decision to but a full power e mtb. Went for an Orbea Wild no regrets with the power or weight.
You are welcome! haha. Glad you enjoy it.
I really do love them all and would take any one of them , I've got a 21' sl with a Specialized shop just 20 mi from me , the choice was simple
Great review! Very curious how the new Hecker SL compares head to head with the Transition Relay?
Yeah hopefully the Loam wolf will give us their thoughts
Very different due to the travel and plus feeling suspension of the Transition vs the Heckler SL. We've not had enough time on Heckler SL, which is a very fun bike, but let's just say since we're not the biggest VPP suspension fans, it wouldn't have taken away the awards given for most of our crew. Still a rad and playful bike and in the right terrain, it rips!
Great review! As e-bike user my go to bike is Trek Rail and first think is getting rid of bar combo (worst thing ever). Once you try full power e-bike then you never want to go back to SL.
Now that you guys have ridden a bunch of SL bikes and full power, can you do a short break down on why you might chose one over the other?
Great roundup! Thanks for the excellent review and solid recommendations.
Much appreciated!
Fantastic video, really appreciate all the thought and time put into this! However, I'm constantly frustrated when bike reviews are on team or top of the line packages. A $14k bike is not in the budget for 99% of people, so ultimately this video wasn't that helpful. Would love to see videos focused on models your audience can actually afford and would be interested in!
Great good guys!! I have a turbo levo gen 3 looking for a Sl and going probably on the light side. Going to be probably looking more with the fazua stuff it looks like better unite I think. Thanks for making my life easier.
Great review, Thanks! I am demoing the Giant Elite +2 this week. I did not care for the non elite version, too heavy and not nimble enough.
How'd the demo go? Did you like the bike?
Well done! Super nice shootout! 🙏🏻👍🏻👏🏻💪🏻
Thank you very much! We're glad you enjoyed it.
Thank you, appreciate this review.
Glad it was helpful!
The best thing these bikes do is help people with health conditions. I am type one diabetic, and the power saves me when my blood sugar is crashing and I need to keep up with friend on non-ebikes. I have a big full-power, I am going down to an SL as I want the feel of an analog, but enough power in an emergency when pedaling too hard. This review helped. However, please god review the lower levels of these models. This applies to the 1% of bike consumers...
I've had the Specialized Levo SL 2023 for a few months now. Did a ton of research. Its a fantastic bike for 90% of things.
As for the power comments... I think these guys are getting old and fat :) I'm 5'10", 185lbs and think Trail mode is cheating. :)
That being said, I wanted a bike that didn't look like an e-bike. Only a couple of the bikes in this list fit that bill.
My buddy has the Trek. The Trek is more stealthy / quieter, but has a bit less battery efficiency / range compared to the Specialized.
If you want a super light, playful, fun, and poppy light e-bike that doesn't look like an e-bike, the Specialized is perfect. I can get ~30 miles on my local trails WITHOUT the range extender. I, personally, think it climbs super easily on Trail mode.... I don't even use the Power/Boost mode.
I’m looking at switching from a full power or should I say a full weight e-bike to an SL. I have a cube stereo hybrid 160 which is great when you take it into the hills where the chunky stuff is but most of my riding is pretty flat trails. I’m pretty fit and don’t need 85nm of torque with 700wh plus battery. I ride my cube in Eco mostly and have the torque set to 45nm. On steeper longer climbs I will move up to Tour+ which I have set at 60nm. Personally I think the biggest issue with full power e-bikes is that here in the UK, they are limited to 15.5mph. This is too low. It’s too easy to hit the limit on the flat and also on some gradients. You then feel the weight of the bike and it spoils the fun. I think an SL at around 19kg would feel a bit more lively and be less of a drag when you hit that limiter.
My home town 👍 stoked to see you guys shredding the trails.
Awesome to hear!
I didn’t like the one piece handlebars at first but they grew on my over time, now I really like them, however I wouldn’t pay that much for a set of handlebars (mine came with the bike).
Great job! I would love to see you guys time and do a 2-3k+ climb on them, as well as a short one. It would help reveal durability and engineering quality, imo.
Great comparison guys nice job, can’t help but feel that if the trek fuel exe if only the tq motor put out 60nm of torque and had slightly large battery to accommodate the extra power it would be a no brained with the near silent operation of the tq motor
No, the guys have forgotten the point of a light ebike If you approach it with that perspective, you should buy a normal one or wait for the Bosch SX
@@Maxi_Maxthe guys don't like normal bikes or SL ebikes... they've said it again and again, in almost every video.
They ride dirtbikes so, the big ebikes are a natural extension for them.
Did you guys put the Levo SL to 100%? By default it only gives 80% power in turbo.
That’s right. To unlock the full potential, the power settings need to be bumped up in the app. Under controlled hill climb tests, the Levo SL has been as fast or faster than the 60 nm bikes.
There are a few of us awaiting a reply on this question.
@@RealDriver8 maybe the silence is the answer?
I rode a full power ebike for a couple years and am curious how many of you would trade in your full power ebike for a lightweight and why? Thanks for the great content
Very tough call... With a range extender it's getting to be a closer decision but still a very tough one! I think its very much rider dependent but we think 75% of our crew will keep a good full power bike as of right now. 630-700 battery is great.
@@TheLoamWolf Is that due to how much longer the battery lasts or the extra power it puts out? I've never ridden full powers or SL's so i'm trying to gauge which direction to go.
@Isaac, it depends if you feel as and want to be a mtb-er. If you like the spirit and ethos of mtb-ing. If you want that in your life then, you'll like SL ebikes. If you don't care and all you want is big power uphill and big squishy on the downs, don't bother and keep your full fat ebike.
FULL POWER…..Every Day..All the Way !!!!!! ALL the TIME 😊
Nothing wrong with that!!
full fat ebike are for knobs and for poser mtb-ers. The only thing they have in common with mtb-ing are the terrain in which the activity takes place.
On real mtb trails, fat ebikes are awkward and cumbersome to manoeuvre, give you a heavy and heavily inertial feel and feedback and, on real mtb down the hill trails, fat mtbs are slower than SL ebikes and normal bikes as well; basically, slow full fat ebikes for slow full fat knob riders. (in 99% of the cases)
@@eugenux
Who said anything about fat-tire ebike ?
All though I have one and have a blast on it in the snow and on the beach, I have two main ebikes I ride all the time. I love my POLE VOIMA and GIANT TRANCE….
and neither are fat-tire bikes.
Thanks for your reply
@@apatriotofhopedanjohn4781all ebikes bar the SLs are fat(i.e. heavy) and ride like shi.te..., when you compare them with SLs and, especially, with normal bikes.
Great series once again. Down to earth review
Thanks very much!
I'm partial to the Giant Trance Elite (because I bought one!) but I knew it wasn't going to win best overall. However, I'm glad you guys basically created a whole new award just as a recognition for how significant it was for Giant to have created it. There's no other bike like it right now, and I love that there are very few sacrifices to make with the Trance Elite. Lightweight AND full power? AND range extender while still being lighter than every 'full fat' ebike? so much WIN
Agreed and thank you very much!
How is 44 lb a sl?
@@techne9992 There's not a universal standard or definition, and not every manufacturer goes by the 'SL' term... So it's whatever the hell you want it to be. As far as the Giant goes... It's certainly not the lightest, but most people would consider a 44lb, full-powered ebike to be pretty light.
Also, Giant's website claims the Trance Elite 0 is 41 pounds in a size medium. I don't know if the Loam Wolf guys weighed their size L bike with a scale, but there's that.
@@techne9992because it's a whole tier less than 50 lbs
Getting my Giant elite + 1 can’t wait 👌
I love these group tests, in depth reviews, slick video 👍 I have the H15 orbea with the Cascade 150mm link on pre order together with a 160 mm fork upgrade, it should make a great bike even better. This new crop of bikes just keep getting better. I’d take the Pivot so or the Transition 🤙🤙
Awesome thank you! And enjoy your sweet new bike!
Did any of you try the Relay in a mullet set up at all? Review was awesome!
Great reviews!! Thanks for great reviews
Thank you for watching and the kind words! We appreciate it.
Great reviews. Like really good. Disappointed the Santa Cruz didn’t make it in the final video.
Yes we were bummed to not have it in time as well!
I love your guys reviews. My only critique is that you test the highest end version of every bike. No one is buying those ones. I wish you would get the mid version of each one. If you buy a 10+ thousand bike in 2023 you are doing it wrong.
Unfortunately it’s all about what the companies send them. They all end up sending them their high end stuff. Pinkbike has talked about it in depth on their podcast
The problem with mid price comparison is the mixed bag of where costs were cut, one will have better brakes, the next better suspension etc. If it's all top spec then the review is about the frame and the part of the bike that won't get changed. Mid level reviews often end up describing which component ended up being the limit of the bike's performance, I can't stand them.
And why the bike industry is now bombing, greed led to screwing a great community.
@Nugemart LOL, I think you mean a delayed response to an unusual spike in demand. I'm not aware of any industry that comes close to the level of customer focus and passion for the sport mountain biking has.
Definitely this! Pick bikes in the 6k-8k range!
Great vid! I bought the Relay on the back of this. Great bike.
But the ring controller/remote is SUCH SUCH a disappointment!!! I’m on my second under warranty (1 split opened and the other just stopped working). Fazua have to sort this out! It’s spoiling an otherwise excellent bike!
Great reviews gentlemen! I'm really hoping the new SRAM transmissions prove to have much better longevity on ebikes.
Hopefully Pinion will become more mainstream
Really good review thanks guys. You have helped me limit my choice to the Giant or the Transition. I read that the Giant had an annoying habit of resetting the power settings after each ride. Do you know if this has been rectified?
That was resolved with firmware
Great review! Just wondering if you guys played with the mission control app to see if you could give the Levo Sl more uphill grunt?
Would sure like an answer on this too
@@RealDriver8 From what I understand, the stock settings are somewhat detuned to maximize the battery. You're not getting 100 % boost unless you go into the settings.
What happened with the Santa Cruz?
They did not give us the bike in time for this group review. However we will be riding it more to get some impressions beyond our First Ride thoughts and try to reference it to other bikes here.
Looking at SL's to get into ebikes here
Great round up, respect the giant, but it is a full power eMTB at 85 nM bike so not sure it should be in this test, but you guys are the experts. Would have liked to know what you thought the range performances were, good or bad, and would like to see where the giant would sit here.
Two main consumer criteria not mentioned in this group.
1) Is it going to be your only bike ? One bike to shred everything or another horse in the stable. This is defining for this category for myself and most of my riding buddies.
2) rider weight
Even acknowledging the different power and torque measurements there is some cutofff where lower power struggles based on rider weight. This category is straddling the “just enough” so it would be good to see rider weights. At 160# in not and wet through I’m happy on 60nm riding with full power bikes but my 220# riding buddy has a completely different experience
To be honest I can feel the difference between 60nm and 85nm but it’s not really translated into riding whereas someone much heavier even if they are fit it will be a completely different experience
I think this combines with #1 ^^
I’m sure the transition would be ideal for me especially the other criteria I have with removable battery but not for my bigger riding buddy
Another mate slightly heavier (maybe another 10#) has a kenevo sl and a turbo levo .. we do different rides when he’s on the SL
We all own multiple bikes but only 1 has 2x emtb and I ride my emtb less than 1/2 the time but when I do I want to know I’m on an ebike especially those after work rides and just pack everything in.
@@stephenlord599 I had pulled the trigger on the fazua powered e bike as I wanted a lightweight less than 20 kg bike, very happy with what I have although a full powered passed me the other day, but dont we hate show offs. My bike performs brilliantly so no issues, just have to put some work in to keep right up with the full fats.
I love that you have a lightweight shoot out to compliment the full power. On my end, in no way am I purchasing any of the most expensive of any brands bike, so I am looking for bang for the buck. Some of the hold ups in some of the bikes seem to be limited to the Top end bike (live valve, one piece bar/stem) so I am curious as who the "lightweight emtb overall winner" would be for those in the $7-$8k range. I currently have a 2019 Rocky Mountain Instinct PP.
With the chain breaks, were lightweight chains in use? I am curious if it was decided to put lighter more expensive changes that would work great on an XC bike but not good for the e-bike.
Great job, really helped me making a decision.
Transition Relay!
Glad it helped!
You guys did an amazing job on this series! I am trying to get my Dad to get an ebike. The orbea seems like it would be perfect for him.
Great video series
Could you please do a review for a group of lower spec versions less then $4000 or $6000 ?
Yes we will work that for next year!
Road biker here. I train on a turbo trainer and just bought a Levo SL to be able to get out on the trails without loading up the legs with additional fatigue and ruining my training gains. Also want the bike to be easy to load into the car to take it to a bike park every once in a while.
Also, my friends don't train and ride manual bikes, so I figure I can turn the motor off when I ride with them to give myself a bit of a handicap.
I have ridden my Levo SL 70% of the time with the power turned off (riding it with friends), and turn it on when I need it. It was stolen recently and I am deciding what to go with next!
great video to watch.
the pivot looks awesome shame theres no display, the trek looks awesome but needs 60n, big shame about the forestal but that will teach them for a 15000 euro price tag here in the uk. great content guys
Thanks for watching!
How would the new Canondale moterra SL fit with these? Shoot it out!
Great stuff! …sounds like if the Transition Relay with it’s travel, and the Giant “Long Name” with its power, had a baby, That’d be the perfect EMTB!🤔😜
Fuel EXe is my pick, especially with its new 2024 spec and pricing update this week!!
Very cool to see this market expand, but a bit dismayed that there are no real choices that provide geo/stand-over/weight that would work for shorter riders (under 5'5"), even from Liv. It would be great to see the market go back to 27.5" wheels to make smaller eMTBs more functional for that demographic.
Question… if one was to throw a 160mm air-spring in the Pivot SL 36, and play with volume spacers, do y’all think that would be a more balanced ride? Get down into the 64.5 HTA in the low setting. The fork not keeping up with the rear end seemed to be the biggest hang-up in the review. I’m about to pull the trigger on that bike but I hate feeling under-forked. Thanks for the great series fellas.
Thanks very much. It would certainly slacken out the front end a hair and give a more aggressive front end! That combined with some burly casing, high volume rear tire and you'd have a killer machine but ultimately, nothing will make up for rear wheel travel! As amazing as the Pivot is, it still only has 132mm of travel, BUT that is plenty enough for a lot of riders, so if that's you, then get after it! Hope that helps.
May I recommend including an older rider in the test group ,@59 and 35+ years of mt. biking I am looking to extend my rides and an e-bike is the solution for us older riders. To have a perspective from an older rider would greatly benefit our buying decision. Ty
Thanks for sharing your insights.
First off, absoloutely awesome series.
A question: Thoughts on which bike would be best to ride with non-ebikes? I have many friends/family who don't ride as often and would prefer to be on a lightweight e bike for a bit of a boost when coming on 'acoustic' pedals? They don't need max power output, just looking for a small boost. A quiet motor would probably be a major asset, not directly advertising to the rest of the group the situation.
Thank you! The TQ and Fazua are certainly quietest bikes in the mix. HOwever the Fazua we rode in the new Santa Cruz was a bit louder than the Pivot Shuttle and Transition.
Very nice! ❤
Bit unfortunate Santa Cruz came a little late, though.
Thanks Drew. Awesome content as always. Drew, couples of observations/questions:
1. Big range of bike styles ie lumen v relay. The relay is really e enduro bike. Would habeen cool to see SL enduro shootout, or are there not enough in that category for it's own shootout?
2. Would the heckler SL have won this shootout if it had been ready in time for inclusion do you think!?
3. Do you know if SC will make a 170/170 SL like the nomad/megatower?
Thanks heaps Drew. You should have 500k subscribers!!
Thank you very much! We’ll keep these pointed responses here -
1 that is correct. We think more bikes will be coming in the future but as of now, this was all we could get.
2 no it would not have.
3. We’re not sure but we can sure hope! It would make sense. But we’d be much for stoked if the Shuttle SL came in an LT!!
Huge spread on pricing. I will take full power with good suspension under 8k. The weight isn't an issue for me.
It’ll be interesting to see where sales and the market goes based on consumer purchases!
@theloamwolf would love to hear how the Santa Cruz Heckler SL compares to these
Ok so you guys aren't fans of the VPP. I've never ridden one but right now it's between the Relay & Santa Cruz, maybe the Pivot. Worried about that 132mm rear end not being enough. I've looked up the VPP in some of your old videos and just on google trying to understand it better. I see mentions of uphills on sharp rocks and brake bumps it being rough or bouncing before catching (your full power Heckler review). We ride Moab A LOT so I'm familiar with the terrain there for an example, lots of rocks, uphill and downhill, sharp edges. Also Brake bumps ripping through berms in DH parks. How would a VPP suspension on the Heckler SL in theory handle in these environments? We do like smooth trails as well but need a bike to ride it all. Thanks a bunch
Thanks very much and you kinda nailed it there. Every suspension platform has pros and cons. Like anything in life, there is a give and take. VPP drawbacks are noted most on fast, square-edge hits, comfort and it's hangup. This causes deceleration slightly, fatigue, feedback and reduced traction to varying extents.
We very much wish the Shuttle SL had more travel or an LT version was also available, maybe one day??
Coil shocks can help VPPs feel better and why many sponsored athletes of VPP brands run coils. We've had conversations with lots of pro athletes over the years. The Heckler SL can run a coil and could be an option...
Relay is a sick all around platform and there is a reason we all chose it as the winner, and bike we'd most likely buy.
Hope that helps.
Drew
I’d be interested to know the weight of you guys. Just as I have a Kenevo sl with less power than all these and don’t feel like it’s underpowered at all. I ride in trail 60% power -100% support most of the time. Only the steeper climbs I put it in turbo. But do only weigh 70kg, I feel a lot of these sl E bikes struggle when heavier riders use them.
Relay, one comment, if the battery charge port is inside the frame, how will a range extender work on this bike (once released)? Personally I view a RE as a "must-have" for this ebike category.
Another decent review, thanks LW team.
I believe these imposter/ebike lite/SL e-bikes are basically what we should expect emtb's in the near future. We will have lower weight bikes, with full power availability in an SL form factor, along with modular battery options to suit the rider's needs. There wont be a need to make a bike that is in between analog and and power assist, just a high quality emtb that allows it be setup based on the rider's desired experience. There is no reason we can't have a silent TQ sized motor with a sleek downtube, with a minimalist cockpit, that provides about a 700w peak/90+ ft/lbs of assist.
That said.....
I would like to see more info and demo's of all the "apps" and integration available in these type's of reviews, along with a deeper dive into the calibration possibilities that they offer. I don't think we can just ignore this aspect anymore and say whatever, the default settings are gtg and this is just how the bike rides. A "good" or properly configured calibration for a rider, can be the difference between loving and hating a bike.
On the questions asked:
yes one-piece bar/stem setups need to go, along with integrated cables.
On the chain issue, we need to look at possibly less gears and bigger beefier chains found on a 9-10 speed, or better yet internal gearbox, with belt drives possibly.
Thank you for the input! Always looking to improve and we will include that in future emtb series reviews.
Great job 👏🏻
Thank you! 😁
If you were to put the Kenevo SL in the mix, where would it place?