Radon render 10.0hd fitted with a 34t chainring on bosch gen 4 smart. Wants to upgrade to a 36t or 38t. How big is the differens in diameter between the chainrings? Is there a possibility to get a bosch error?
I have enough. Chain pitch is 12.7mm (½"), so diameter ≈ (teeth × 12.7) / π. Let me calculate: - 34T: ~137.5mm
- 36T: ~145.5mm - 38T: ~153.6mm
So 34→36 is ~8mm bigger diameter (~4mm radius), 34→38 is ~16mm bigger diameter (~8mm radius). No need for another search.
@Sander23 - quick answer:
Diameter difference Chain pitch is 12.7mm (½"), so chainring pitch diameter ≈ (teeth × 12.7) ÷ π:
• 34T ≈ 137mm • 36T ≈ 146mm (about 4mm more radius than 34T)
• 38T ≈ 154mm (about 8mm more radius than 34T) So jumping from 34T to 38T means the ring sticks out roughly 8mm further from the spindle. Not huge in absolute terms, but enough to matter for chainstay clearance and chainline.
On at least one Focus Jam 2, a 38T looked like it fit but actually just touched the chainstay - so measure before you buy.
Bosch error risk? No. The Gen 4 Smart System doesn't care about your chainring tooth count - it reads cadence, torque and wheel speed, not gear ratio.
One rider changed both chainring and cassette on a Specialized and noticed no change in motor output, and it's the same story on Bosch. No error code, no derate, nothing to recode at the dealer. Only wheel circumference needs updating in the diagnostic tool, and only if you change wheel size.
What I'd actually do on your Render 10.0 HD You're 95kg on a 170mm Bosch enduro bike. Before ordering, check:
• Chainstay clearance with the 38T offered up to the spider (a 36T is the safer bet on most Gen 4 frames) • Chain length - bigger ring usually needs 1 - 2 extra links
• Chainline - Bosch direct-mount rings come in offsets; stick with the same offset as your current 34T or you'll wreck shifting under load
Honestly, for an enduro eMTB with a 750W motor doing the work, 36T is the sweet spot. 38T just means you spin out 2 teeth later on fireroads while making every steep climb noticeably harder on the motor and drivetrain. Useful prior thread:
https://www.emtbforums.com/threads/20342/