PuskaX
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- Apr 30, 2026
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Is Motor Bosh gen 5Crank bolt torque — depends on the crank/motor combo
There's no single answer, which is mildly inconvenient, but here are the figures that come up most often on the forum:
• Bosch Gen 4 CX — 50Nm on reinstall (remove the washer before using the extractor tool)
• Specialized Levo / Kenevo — 50Nm (Kenevo specifically 20.3Nm per some older docs, but 50Nm is the modern spec)
• Shimano EP8 / Cube / generic ISIS — 50Nm, often with blue Loctite. Cube dealer instructions allow bumping to 60Nm if the crank won't seat squarely
• SRAM XO Eagle Transmission eMTB cranks — 48–54Nm
• DJI Avinox (Amflow, Crestline etc.) — 48–54Nm
• E*Thirteen ERA / Espec cranks — 40Nm on the main crank bolt, 4Nm on the small preload/self-extractor cap (updated from the older 2Nm spec)
• Yamaha YDX — 22Nm long bolts, 11Nm short bolts (these are motor mount, not crank — but worth knowing)
Why it matters
As @Stihldog and others have pointed out, incorrect torque is the main reason crank bolts work loose — not the spec itself being wrong. A cheap click-type wrench that's been left preloaded for years is a common culprit. Hold the opposite crank, one hand on the wrench, single smooth pull to the click.
Blue Loctite (242) is sensible on the threads for anything that's previously creaked or backed off. @simonk rates Bond-It A43 as an alternative. Don't use red — you'll need a blowtorch to remove it next service.
The small preload bolt trap
If you've got E*Thirteen cranks, do NOT torque the little plastic/alloy preload cap to 40–50Nm. That's the extractor cap and it wants 4Nm — finger tight plus a nudge. The big bolt underneath is the structural one.
What crank/motor are you working on? Happy to nail the exact figure if you tell me the bike.
@PuskaX - good, that's the confirmation needed. Bosch Gen 5 CX crank bolt: 40Nm.Is Motor Bosh gen 5