Singletrackmind
Well-known member
Please provide technical data and overview for each crank.
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Right, let me pull together the specs on both of these for you. @Singletrackmind - two quite different beasts here, so let me break them down properly. Worth noting upfront that ethirteen makes both a standard Helix Race Alloy (30mm spindle, for regular bikes) and a Helix Race espec Alloy (ISIS spindle, specifically for eMTBs). I'm going to assume you're looking at the espec version given your bikes, but I'll cover the key differences.Please provide technical data and overview for each crank.
| Feature | ethirteen Helix Race espec Alloy | SRAM X0 Eagle E-MTB |
|---|---|---|
| Material | Forged AL-6066-T6, CNC machined | All aluminium |
| Arm lengths | 155 / 160 / 165mm | 155 / 160 / 165 / 170mm |
| Weight (165mm, arms only) | ~433g | ~550g (est. with chainring, no guard) |
| Spindle | ISIS (24mm) | DUB |
| Chainring mount | Direct mount (e13 Helix) | Direct mount (T-Type) |
| Bash guard | No | Optional bolt-on |
| Crank boots | Included | No |
| Self-extracting bolt | Yes (alloy) | Yes |
| Motor compatibility | Bosch, Brose, TQ, DJI, Yamaha, etc. | Bosch, SRAM Eagle, broad eMTB |
Good question, and worth getting right before you spend the money. Let me dig into the specifics for the Orbea Wild. @Singletrackmind - good question, and you're right that ethirteen is quite firm about this.Please provide chain ring compatibility for Orbea Wild. On the e thirteen website it states you must amuse e thirteen chain ring with the e thirteen cranks. Would I need the 13mm or 15mm offset on the chain ring if Im running SRAM XO T-Type drive train?
Please explain advantages and disadvantages of 155mm & 165mm crank arms lengths for climbing and descending.Good question, and worth getting right before you spend the money. Let me dig into the specifics for the Orbea Wild. @Singletrackmind - good question, and you're right that ethirteen is quite firm about this.
They recommend pairing the Helix Race espec chainring with the Helix Race espec cranks for the "integrated look" and proper fitment, because the chainring direct mount interface is proprietary to the espec crank/motor system. So yes, if you run ethirteen espec cranks on your Orbea Wild, you'd need an ethirteen espec chainring to go with them. You can't bolt a SRAM T-Type direct mount ring onto ethirteen espec cranks, and vice versa.
The good news on chain compatibility is that the M4 narrow-wide tooth profile on the Helix Race espec chainring delivers cross-compatibility with SRAM T-Type Flattop chains. So you can absolutely run a SRAM XO T-Type derailleur, shifter, cassette and Flattop chain with an ethirteen espec chainring, no issues there.
Worth noting that Flattop chains have slightly larger OD rollers than standard Eagle chains, which ethirteen says may result in slightly accelerated wear on components not explicitly designed for them, but that's a minor caveat rather than a compatibility problem.
Now, on your offset question for the Orbea Wild specifically. The 2023 Orbea Wild runs a Bosch Performance CX Gen4 motor, and it came stock with ethirteen espec components already. Looking at what ethirteen offers for the Bosch espec chainring: the Bosch rings come in 32T, 34T, and 36T, but only in 13mm offset. The 15mm offset option appears on their older/different chainring lines, not the current Helix Race espec Bosch variant. So for your Wild with the Bosch CX Gen4, you'd be looking at the 13mm offset chainring. That's the one designed to produce the correct chainline on Bosch CX Gen4/Gen5 frames with Boost spacing, which is exactly what your Orbea Wild uses.
In short: ethirteen espec cranks + ethirteen espec Bosch chainring (13mm offset) + SRAM XO T-Type everything else = fully compatible and a properly tidy setup.
@Singletrackmind This is a genuinely worthwhile question, especially on an eMTB where the motor changes the calculus compared to a regular bike. 155mm cranksPlease explain advantages and disadvantages of 155mm & 165mm crank arms lengths for climbing and descending.
@Rizzle Right, this is a genuinely important question for your 181.2 build, and the Avinox crank situation has some proper gotchas that are worth understanding before you commit your money.I am considering the E13 race and the Sram Eagle 90 cranks for my pending Crestline 181.2 build. What are the issues surrounding the E13 crank stop torque and the DJI motor? Is this still an issue? What other issues do these two crank arm options pose for my build? Do both have motor covers and spac...
I was referring to the Eagle 90 Isis crank arms not the XO dub. Please tell me about potential pitfalls with the Eagle 90 vs the E13 Isis crank arms.@Rizzle Right, this is a genuinely important question for your 181.2 build, and the Avinox crank situation has some proper gotchas that are worth understanding before you commit your money.
The ethirteen Helix Race Alloy and the Avinox crank stop issue ethirteen confirms that both their Helix Race Alloy espec and Helix Core espec cranks are designed for the ISIS standard and are compatible with Avinox. Both the 21.5mm and 26.5mm ISIS "Bosch" models will work on Avinox motors, which use a version of the ISIS standard.
You'd want the 21.5mm offset version for the Avinox specifically, as the 21.5mm offset cranks are designed for optimal fit with Bosch SX, Brose S-Mag, DJI Avinox, TQ HPR50 and Specialized 2.2 & 3.1 motor systems.
Now, here's the rub. The ISIS standard as originally developed incorporates a "crank stop" that limits how far the crank can be pressed onto the spindle. The Avinox design does not have a crank stop. The lack of a crank stop can result in variance of how far the crank will press onto the spindle depending on install torque.
This is the issue you've heard about and it's a real one. With repeated removal and reinstallation without a crank stop, the distance the crank installs on the spindle may increase over time, even if the same torque is used during each installation.
Practically speaking, this means the cranks can creep deeper onto the spindle over time, and
this could mean that the dust wiper found on Helix e*spec cranks needs to be removed even when using ethirteen Helix rings if the crank preloads deeper than it would on an ISIS spindle which incorporates a crank stop.
It's not a dealbreaker, but it does mean you'll want to pay careful attention at installation and mark your depth so you can monitor any creep over time. Use a torque wrench religiously.
The SRAM X0 Eagle Transmission option The SRAM X0 Eagle T-Type cranks use SRAM's DUB spindle interface, not ISIS.
They're available with a bash guard option and are power meter ready.
However, the X0 Eagle Transmission crankset is designed around SRAM's own DUB bottom bracket system, not around an eMTB motor spindle. These are fundamentally different architectures. The Avinox motor uses an ISIS-style spindle that comes out of the motor itself, so the cranks mount directly to the motor spindle. A DUB-spindle crank like the X0 Eagle wouldn't bolt onto the Avinox motor spindle without some kind of adapter arrangement, and I'm not aware of a clean solution for that.
Some Avinox bikes do come specced with SRAM Eagle Transmission drivetrains (the Amflow PL, for example), but those use DJI's own Avinox SL Crank rather than SRAM cranks on the motor spindle.
The SRAM bits are the derailleur, cassette, and chain, not the crankarms themselves. Motor covers and chainring protection
This is where the Avinox platform differs substantially from Bosch or Shimano. The DJI motor has great ground clearance, which fully leaves the chainring exposed.
That's excellent for pedal clearance but means you lose the built-in bash protection that a bulkier motor housing provides. Motor covers and spacers tend to be frame-specific on Avinox builds, so you'd need to check what Crestline provides with the 181.2 frame kit specifically.
On the chainring protection front, ethirteen does offer their Turbocharger system which integrates a rugged, lightweight, composite bashguard with a 104 BCD spider and Helix 104 BCD chainring, with compact, integrated aesthetic specifically for Avinox systems.
That's probably your best off-the-shelf solution for bash protection with the E13 cranks. Worth noting that the Avinox version is 34T only. The short version
The ethirteen Helix Race Alloy in 21.5mm offset ISIS is genuinely compatible with your Avinox build. The crank stop issue is real but manageable with careful installation. The SRAM X0 Eagle crankset, being a DUB-spindle design, isn't a direct-mount option for the Avinox motor spindle. You'd be looking at ethirteen, DJI's own cranks, or Lekkie as your main aftermarket crank options for this motor.
I can dig into chainring sizing, crank length pros and cons for your build, or the Turbocharger bash guard setup in more detail if you want.
Fair enough, @Rizzle, that's on me for assuming you meant the DUB-based X0. The SRAM Eagle 90 is indeed an ISIS crank, so it's a much more direct comparison with the ethirteen Helix. Let me look into the specifics.I was referring to the Eagle 90 Isis crank arms not the XO dub. Please tell me about potential pitfalls with the Eagle 90 vs the E13 Isis crank arms.