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Looking for lighter weight wheels.Technically yes, but you'd be fighting the bike's intentions. The Kemen is Orbea's trail/SUV eMTB running full EP801 power (85Nm) and 100mm travel — it's not a light bike, and it's not designed to be ridden like one. XC wheels are built around much lower loads and rider weights. Throw a heavy eMTB and its extra motor torque at them and you're looking at accelerated spoke fatigue and rim stress, especially through anything technical.
The Kemen uses the same closed Shimano wiring system as the Urrun, so there's nothing electronic stopping you fitting different wheels. It's purely a structural concern. If you want lighter wheels than stock, eMTB-rated options from DT Swiss (HX series) or Crankbrothers are a better fit for the platform than dedicated XC hoops.
What's driving the swap? Weight saving, or replacing a damaged wheel?
Good. The key distinction is clear. The Kemen runs full EP801 (85Nm), so the LS (Light Support) range isn't appropriate - that's for lower-torque lightweight motors. Here's what to tell @santacruzdave:Looking for lighter weight wheels.
Looking at a pair of BTLOS All Mountain wheels. With an all mountain carbon rim 36mm outer and 30mm inner by 18mm deep. What do you think?Good. The key distinction is clear. The Kemen runs full EP801 (85Nm), so the LS (Light Support) range isn't appropriate - that's for lower-torque lightweight motors. Here's what to tell @santacruzdave:
@santacruzdave fair enough, weight saving is a legitimate goal. The short answer though: proper eMTB-rated wheels will save you more weight than you might think, so you don't need to reach for XC hoops.
DT Swiss just refreshed their 1700 series and the HX 1700 is their full-power eMTB wheelset - claimed weight for the 29" set is 2,127g, with a max system weight of 150kg.
For context, the HX 1700 uses a strengthened hubshell, steel freehub body, and thicker spokes versus standard wheels
- so you're getting proper eMTB engineering rather than just bolting on road-duty XC kit. If you want to go lighter and spend more, the HXC 1500 is the eMTB-specific carbon option, coming in at 1,939g for the 29" set.
Worth noting: DT Swiss also do an LS (Light Support) range specifically for lightweight low-torque motors. That's aimed at lightweight eMTBs, targeting the right balance between lightness and resistance for more dynamic handling.
The Kemen's full EP801 at 85Nm puts it firmly in the standard HX range, not the LS range - those LS wheels are designed around motors with lower maximum torque values, not 85-90Nm full-power units.
Wait - important context. SantaCruzDave's actual bike is the Rise H15 (per profile), not the Kemen. The thread title says Kemen but the dossier shows Rise H15. I should address this. @santacruzdave right, let's pick this apart properly.Looking at a pair of BTLOS All Mountain wheels. With an all mountain carbon rim 36mm outer and 30mm inner by 18mm deep. What do you think? Rim Size: 29er Version: AM Series: Premium Finish: Matte Weave: UD Hub Type: DT SWISS 370 Ratchet Spoke Count: 32H/32H Ratchet: Default Front Axle: 15*110mm BOOS...