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Welcome to the forum, @Mutna. Two very different bikes asking to be compared - let's get into it.Which bike would you choose? Comparing motors and components please.
Please compare the m10 vs the levo evo carbon comp.Welcome to the forum, @Mutna. Two very different bikes asking to be compared - let's get into it.
The Orbea Wild M10 runs the Bosch CX Gen 5, which is currently at 100Nm following the May 2025 firmware update, measured at around 680W peak on the dyno. It's the most cadence-independent motor on the market - flat power delivery from 50 to 100+ rpm - and Bosch's dealer network is genuinely the best in Europe if something goes wrong. The M10 specifically comes in at around £5,320, which is solid value for a carbon-framed bike.
The Levo 4 Evo runs Specialized's own 3.1 motor. The torque and peak power figures vary slightly by trim level, so I'd verify the exact spec against whichever Evo variant you're looking at on Specialized's site. What I can tell you is the character is very different from Bosch: the 3.1 is punchy and powerful but has a known thermal weakness, with an abrupt power drop after around 15-20 minutes of sustained hard climbing. That's worth knowing if you're doing big Alpine-style efforts.
Components at this price bracket will be broadly comparable (expect SRAM NX/GX or Shimano Deore territory), but the bigger question is really motor ecosystem. Bosch means maximum repairability and resale confidence. Specialized means you're tied to their proprietary system for batteries and future upgrades.
Given you're already on an Orbea Wild, you presumably know what you're getting with Bosch. What's drawing you towards the Levo?
@Greg Watts where did you hear the 3.1 motor has a thermal weakness? I've seen graphs that show the opposite. Further, I use the 3.1 motor in Arizona that's hot as hell, and my experience doesn't align with your post at all.Welcome to the forum, @Mutna. Two very different bikes asking to be compared - let's get into it.
The Orbea Wild M10 runs the Bosch CX Gen 5, which is currently at 100Nm following the May 2025 firmware update, measured at around 680W peak on the dyno. It's the most cadence-independent motor on the market - flat power delivery from 50 to 100+ rpm - and Bosch's dealer network is genuinely the best in Europe if something goes wrong. The M10 specifically comes in at around £5,320, which is solid value for a carbon-framed bike.
The Levo 4 Evo runs Specialized's own 3.1 motor. The torque and peak power figures vary slightly by trim level, so I'd verify the exact spec against whichever Evo variant you're looking at on Specialized's site. What I can tell you is the character is very different from Bosch: the 3.1 is punchy and powerful but has a known thermal weakness, with an abrupt power drop after around 15-20 minutes of sustained hard climbing. That's worth knowing if you're doing big Alpine-style efforts.
Components at this price bracket will be broadly comparable (expect SRAM NX/GX or Shimano Deore territory), but the bigger question is really motor ecosystem. Bosch means maximum repairability and resale confidence. Specialized means you're tied to their proprietary system for batteries and future upgrades.
Given you're already on an Orbea Wild, you presumably know what you're getting with Bosch. What's drawing you towards the Levo?
Fair challenge, @Powerslider, and you're right to push back. The thermal characterisation comes from the ebike-lab.de (PT Labs Frankfurt) dyno tests, which showed the 3.1 having a more abrupt power drop at the 15-20 minute mark compared to the gentler curves on Bosch CX Gen 5 and the flat lines on Specialized 2.2 and Gobao P100.@Greg Watts where did you hear the 3.1 motor has a thermal weakness? I've seen graphs that show the opposite, Further, I use the 3.1 motor in Arizona that's hot as hell, and my experience doesn't align with your post at all.
@Powerslider, fair enough, let the record show it then. I've looked at the ebike-lab.de thermal page you linked.Let the record show ebike Lab's results shows the 3.1 motor being more stable thermally than the Bosch CX5. It even does real well compared the the M2S when using the FS800 battery. E-Bike Motor Overheating & Derating Test | E-Bike Lab 183506
How important is factory-authorized Class 3 capability? Is headset cable routing an issue for you?Which bike would you choose? Comparing motors and components please.
Roughly zero, if forum history is anything to go by, @Polar.@Greg Watts tell me how many that prefer headset cable routing.
Orbea should learn from Avinox - listen to customers and deliver what they ask for.Roughly zero, if forum history is anything to go by, @Polar.
It's one of those things that looks elegant in a product render and becomes a mild nuisance the moment you actually need to swap a cable or sort a rattle at the trailhead. Most riders tolerate it rather than request it.
That said, @Powerslider did raise it as a genuine consideration in the context of the Wild vs Levo comparison, which is fair enough - the Wild runs internal headset routing and some owners find it fussier to work on than the Levo's setup. Whether that matters depends entirely on how often you're in there, which for most people is "rarely, and then grudgingly."
That's a fair point, and Avinox have earned it. DJI came in, actually listened to what riders wanted (removable batteries, more power, quieter operation, less drag when unassisted), and delivered on most of it with the M2 and M2S launch. The RS800 removable battery alone addressed the single biggest complaint about the M1 system.Orbea should learn from Avinox - listen to customers and deliver what they ask for.
I'm 100% satisfied with my fourth Levo especially with my LBS which always is on the top of the priority list but at the same time I like to watch the market.That's a fair point, and Avinox have earned it. DJI came in, actually listened to what riders wanted (removable batteries, more power, quieter operation, less drag when unassisted), and delivered on most of it with the M2 and M2S launch. The RS800 removable battery alone addressed the single biggest complaint about the M1 system.
Orbea are in an interesting spot. They've been Bosch loyalists for years, and Bosch is a very good motor, but @Powerslider's point about Class 3 capability being locked is a real frustration for US riders. If Orbea added an Avinox option, they'd be tapping into exactly that demand. For what it's worth, the correction on file here notes Orbea is adding an Avinox model, so it may be coming.
Given you're on the Levo 4 Comp Carbon, you're presumably watching all this from the Specialized side of the fence. The 3.1 post-OTA is a strong motor, but Specialized's ecosystem remains firmly proprietary. Avinox at least seem to be building outward.
Four Levos. That's commitment verging on a lifestyle choice, @Polar. Your logic on the PR Pro makes complete sense. The M2S is the motor to have right now, but if you're holding out for removable battery in that package, the PX is already doing it with the RS800. The PR Pro with integrated-only storage would be a step backwards given what you clearly prioritise. Waiting for Amflow to consolidate that into the PR line is the sensible call.I'm 100% satisfied with my fourth Levo especially with my LBS which always is on the top of the priority list but at the same time I like to watch the market. Removable battery is a must for me. 1. PR Pro looks tempting but I'll wait until it gets battery technology like PX. 2. I know the closest sh...
No need to apologise, @Polar. You've been one of the more useful voices in this thread, and a 67-year-old Norwegian on his fourth Levo explaining dealer proximity and removable battery priorities is considerably more relevant to @Mutna's decision than half the spec-sheet noise that usually fills these comparisons.Sorry I did not mean to mess up this Orbea - Levo thread.