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Bonnell 775MX (modifications; what and why?)

Have any of you guys bashed the CYC setup on your bonell into rocks and logs? I ride a lot of technical rocks, logs, and ledges. I typically bend bash rings on my cranks frequently. The CYC setup looks like its in a very vulnerable position on the bike. How does it hold up to impacts?
 
Have any of you guys bashed the CYC setup on your bonell into rocks and logs? I ride a lot of technical rocks, logs, and ledges. I typically bend bash rings on my cranks frequently. The CYC setup looks like its in a very vulnerable position on the bike. How does it hold up to impacts?
I have a similar bike and i bash all the time, especially under suspension compression
 
I just want a bash guard regardless. Seems like a no brainier to protect the motor and controller with a smooth steel or aluminum cage. I took my 775 MX for it's first real ride yesterday on some dirt bike trails around here and had a blast. This thing is just incredibly fun on technical dirt bike trails but charging over logs and chunky rocks feels sketchy. Wondering if I should design something and have it made by send cut send or a similar service.
 
Does anyone know a battery builder that would make a lightweight battery for the 775mx? My guy is too busy. I'm looking for 2/3 the Ah at 1/2 - 2/3 the weight.
 
Mine will be replacing one of my LightBees. I won't get to pick it up for a few more weeks, so I'm curious to hear from any riders who use it as a trail dirtbike. What do you think of the pedals vs pegs? Have you considered shorter cranks, or replacing the cranks with pegs? Do you find yourself using the pedals to extend range or for some other reason? It seems the gearing on them (6-9mph?) makes them useless for anything other than trying to pass as a Class 1,2,3 ebike.
 
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Mine will be replacing one of my LightBees. I won't get to pick it up for a few more weeks, so I'm curious to hear from any riders who use it as a trail dirtbike. What do you think of the pedals vs pegs? Have you considered shorter cranks, or replacing the cranks with pegs? Do you find yourself using the pedals to extend range or for some other reason? It seems the gearing on them (6-9mph?) makes them useless for anything other than trying to pass as a Class 1,2,3 ebike.
I've been riding mine on dirtbike trails around here and really enjoying it. The pedals are mostly useless in stock form except for the reason you've stated. I'm tempted to get the cyc drivetrain as others have done on this thread so I could pedal it at a speed that would make sense on the dirt roads around here, 25mph at a slowish cadence would be ideal. If you don't care about that, shorter cranks or just pegs would definitely make sense.
 
After a couple days of parts swapping*, testing, and tuning around my house I did a proper singletrack ride on the moto trails above Breckenridge. This thing is definitely replacing my Surron Light Bee. Plenty of power for my 175lbs and perfect handling (size large, 6'1"). I'm liking the pedals and used them a lot on transfer sections between trails to save my battery. I have pedal assist turned off so the motor is purely controlled by the twist throttle.

*Initial problems were the shock spring is too soft, handlebar is too high for good front tire control on all but steep downhills, the rear brake instantly overheated, and the tires weren't ideal.
Bonnell really nailed the details on this bike so I'm surprised by the 500lb spring on a size large. It was definitely too soft for my 175lbs. I wanted to try a 525 spring but the e-moto shop (Power Curve Cycles in Golden, CO) only had a 550. With only 1 turn of preload it seems right and I'm glad I didn't get a 525.
A different stem & bar lowered the grips nearly 2" and I slid the fork legs up in the crowns until the seals are 2mm below the crown at bottom out. There's no longer space to use the fork fender. This improved steering and front tire control on flats and uphills. I'd considered a +1° angle headset but now I'm content.
From experience I know I don't need a 223 front rotor so I replaced it with a 203. After a test run down a DH trail behind my house cooked the rear brake I put that 223 on the back and the brakes have been fine since.
The stock front tire is good, but wider would be nice. I replaced it with a Vittoria enduro casing tire that claims 2.6" and looks like it's maybe wider than the Assegai. In the rear I wanted harder rubber for durability, a rear tire tread (Assegai is a front tire), and more width/volume. I'm using a WTB Breakout with enduro casing and their hard rubber in a claimed 2.5" that looks like a 2.6" compared to the Assegai. It's great, but they are discontinued and I'd still like some more volume and a DH casing. Both tires are tubeless with Tanus tubeless inserts.
I hot waxxed both chains for that clean, smooth, no hassle lifestyle. Look up Silca hot waxxing if you're not familiar.
I have a 26t sprocket on the way but probably won't install it. The motor had enough torque for me and the gearing suited the pedals. Any lower would make the pedals less effective as a range extender on transfers.
A carbon front rim with lighter spokes & hub is on the way, as well as a carbon rear rim that should lace to the stock spokes. Lighter and stiffer.
 
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It appears as though they have scrapped the 775AM (no longer listed on site).Does anyone know whether it will be revived?
 
I cleaned up the front end with a lower handlebar, lowered display, shortened hoses, and tucked in cables. I'm waiting for the carbon rims to weigh it. For my third ride I added clip-in pedals, makingp the back end feel a lot lighter, requiring less effort to toss around or hop over logs. Now that I've got a couple real rides I can easily say that of the 10 dirtbikes I've owned (Suzuki, Yamaha, KTM, Surron) this is my favorite.
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It appears as though they have scrapped the 775AM (no longer listed on site).Does anyone know whether it will be revived?
I suspect the reason this bike has an enduro length shock and 170mm travel (instead of 75mm DH shock with 200mm travel) is it was conceived with the plan to share a frame with the e-bike style AM model. Now that's been killed off, it's a shame the MX model was handicapped. After swapping to a 550 spring I'm doing fine with the rear suspension but more travel would be welcome.
 
Anyone see the new Avinox and Gobao motor gearbox units just released? Only 1500w to the CYC's 6000, but lighter, smaller, with a wide gear range, and they'll come in carbon frames, maybe one with 200mm travel. Wire in a throttle and I wonder if 1500w is enough to not be constantly on the throttle stop.
 
100% fun singletrack with no transfer sections, zero pedaling. Flowy, no tech, lots of elevation change. Started at 100%.
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What's the power and rpm's these MX's run at factory settings? Are they really at 6kW?
 
What's the power and rpm's these MX's run at factory settings? Are they really at 6kW?
I supposed you'd have to test it. Seems a lot of effort to confirm you aren't being lied to. I'll assume the specs are correct. I can say the power is sufficient for every climb I've tried.
 
No rpm reading in the display? At least the early batches were delivered with some kind of limited settings and you had to make a software update to make them go faster. Which means they couldn't have been 6kW from the factory. That's why I'm curious to know what power or rpm they are running now.
 
No rpm reading in the display? At least the early batches were delivered with some kind of limited settings and you had to make a software update to make them go faster. Which means they couldn't have been 6kW from the factory. That's why I'm curious to know what power or rpm they are running now.
The rpm display is just a bar with no numbers. It does show power output in watts but I've never looked at it when it's above 2000. I'll try to remember to check it while on pavement doing a pinned pull from 25-36mph.
The 2026s don't need an update for full power, but you have to use the app to switch from "street" mode to "race".
 
Today I rode with a few very good riders on Husky 300s. Only one of them knew my palmares on a bike. It was mostly steep, tight, loose unsanctioned trails. Everyone was pushing themselves trying to catch mountain bike guy and I was going harder on the throttle than usual to stay ahead of them, so after 15 miles I was down to 35% and power was soft enough I barely made the last steep climb. I took a Jeep road back over the mountain to my van since their planned loop had another sustained steep climb that I didn't think I'd have the power to get up. That ride was as hard on the bike's range as I'll likely be, and the terrain wasn't forgiving of the low power when below ~38% battery. It made a good counterpoint to the flowier (but still with elevation) rides I've been doing and gives me a clear idea of the the bike's range in best* (35mi) & worst** (15mi) case conditions.

*If the trail is fast rolling, I'm not going race pace, and late in the ride there's no climbs that require more power than 20% battery offers, I can plan for 35 miles.
**On a ride like today's where the trail is inefficient, I'm wringing its neck, and the terrain requires the power of at least 38% battery, I won't plan on more than 15 miles before limping home.

P.S. Husky guys were VERY impressed with the bike.
 
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does anyone with the 22 tooth rear sprocket from bonnell know how much the range improves. I usually ride my 775mx to the trail and back I wanted slightly more range without taking away to much torque.
 
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