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Chainring for Shimano EP8

mxh

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My 2022 Marin Alpine Trail E2 with the Shimano EP8 motor needs a new chainring, but I can't seem to find one in stock. The correct one is apparently a Steps SM-CRE80 eBike Chainring with 104bcd and 50mm chainline. Can you confirm that I'm looking for the correct part for this bike and motor, and that the chainline is correct. And if so, can you tell me what alternative chainring I can use if the genuine Shimano one is not available. Ideally I'm looking for 36T.
 
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My 2022 Marin Alpine Trail E2 with the Shimano EP8 motor needs a new chainring, but I can't seem to find one in stock. The correct one is apparently a Steps SM-CRE80 eBike Chainring with 104bcd and 50mm chainline. Can you confirm that I'm looking for the correct part for this bike and motor, and tha...
@mxh, right, let's get this sorted for you. You're on the right track with the SM-CRE80. The Shimano STEPS SM-CRE80 is indeed the correct chainring series for the EP8 motor. It uses the 104 BCD bolt pattern and the 50mm chainline is standard for Shimano's eMTB systems on the E8000/EP8 platform. Your 2022 Alpine Trail E2 should be running 12-speed, so you'd want the SM-CRE80-12 variant specifically (the -12 suffix denotes the 12-speed compatible tooth profile with the narrower/wider pattern to match).

Now, 36T is a slightly awkward size in the Shimano OEM range. Shimano typically offer the SM-CRE80 in 34T and 38T. A 36T isn't a standard Shimano offering for this chainring, so if you've been running a 36T it may have been an aftermarket ring from the start, or Marin specced an unusual option. Worth having a quick look at what's actually on the bike before ordering.

For aftermarket alternatives on 104 BCD with eMTB-appropriate chainline, you've got a few options. The Praxis Works E-Ring Wave is a solid steel option that works on 104 BCD cranks and comes in 34T. @jxj ran a SNAIL 104 BCD 36T chainring on their Levo setup and found it perfectly functional at a fraction of the price of branded alternatives, about $14 USD. That one does come in 36T, which is what you're after. You just need to make sure any aftermarket ring has the correct offset to maintain that 50mm chainline, as some generic 104 BCD rings are designed for standard cranks and sit at a different offset.

SRAM also make a 104 BCD chainring with an integrated bash guard for their eBike groupset, which @doochenozzle mentioned is a clip-on design. That could be worth a look given you've also been hunting for a chain guide with bash guard for the EP8, which would kill two birds with one ring.

Being in Australia, Bike-Discount.de in Germany might be your best bet for the genuine Shimano part if local stock is dry. They've been known to carry the SM-CRE80-12 in 34T at reasonable prices with international shipping. Otherwise, the SNAIL ring off AliExpress is the budget play and gets the job done. I'd just double-check the offset measurement before committing to anything aftermarket.
 
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It's definitely a genuine 36T - here's a snip below from my mtbdirect.com.au order history.

@jxj ran a SNAIL 104 BCD 36T chainring on their Levo setup
But that's not a Shimano motor - am I missing the relevance?

And I was hoping you'd be able to tell me what chainrings come with a 50mm chainline.

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It's definitely a genuine 36T - here's a snip below from my mtbdirect.com.au order history. But that's not a Shimano motor - am I missing the relevance? And I was hoping you'd be able to tell me what chainrings come with a 50mm chainline. 175649
@mxh Fair point on both counts, let me address those. You're right that the Levo runs a Specialized motor, not Shimano, so citing @jxj's SNAIL chainring on that bike wasn't directly relevant to your EP8 chainline question. I included it as a general aftermarket 104 BCD option, but I should have been clearer that chainline offset varies between motor platforms and you can't just assume a ring that works on one will work on another. Sloppy of me.

On the 36T being genuine, I stand corrected. If MTB Direct sold it to you as a 36T SM-CRE80, then Shimano clearly does (or did) produce it in that size even if it's not commonly listed in their standard retail catalogue. Wouldn't be the first time Shimano made an OEM-only size that's a pain to source as a replacement.

Now, to actually answer your question about what chainrings come with a 50mm chainline on 104 BCD, I'll need to do a proper dig on this rather than guess. The issue is that most aftermarket 104 BCD chainrings are designed for standard cranks and sit at a different offset, typically around 47-49mm. The Shimano SM-CRE80 series is specifically designed for the EP8's chainline at 50mm. Beyond that, you're looking at rings that either state "Shimano eMTB compatible" or ones where you can verify the offset independently.

What I'd suggest is measuring the offset on your current 36T ring before it's completely done. It's a straightforward measurement: distance from the back face of the ring to the centreline of the teeth. That gives you the exact number you need to match, and you won't be relying on anyone's marketing claims. If it turns out a standard 104 BCD ring with a slightly different offset works with your chain and cassette without excessive cross-chaining noise, you've got a much wider pool to choose from. But if you need that exact 50mm, you're largely stuck with the Shimano SM-CRE80 series or aftermarket rings that explicitly confirm EP8 compatibility.

I'll have a search around for current availability of the 36T in Australia and report back if I find anything useful.
 
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I feel famous to be mentioned. I did run the snail and wore a couple out they worked great on the 2018 turbo Levo Carbon Comp I still ride. My last two chain rings I switched to a Praxis eRING STEEL MTN 1X 104BCD - 36T STEEL 104BCD WAVE TECH. I don't know if that works for you but I went back to steel with Praxis they do last a bit longer than the aluminum Snail but both were great. I ride in lots of desert sand so wear is a big issue, steel is better in this use for me.
 
I feel famous to be mentioned. I did run the snail and wore a couple out they worked great on the 2018 turbo Levo Carbon Comp I still ride. My last two chain rings I switched to a Praxis eRING STEEL MTN 1X 104BCD - 36T STEEL 104BCD WAVE TECH. I don't know if that works for you but I went back to ste...
@jxj Celebrity status confirmed. I'll make sure your Wikipedia page is updated accordingly.

That's genuinely useful info on the Praxis eRing, though. Steel at 36T on 104 BCD is exactly the kind of option @mxh needs to look into. The key question is whether the Praxis ring's chainline offset plays nicely with the EP8's 50mm requirement, since your Levo runs a different motor platform with its own chainline spec. What works perfectly on the Specialized motor may or may not land in the right place on Shimano STEPS.

That said, the fact you've worn through multiple aluminium rings in Nevada desert sand and found the steel Praxis noticeably more durable is worth knowing regardless of motor platform. Sand is absolutely brutal on drivetrains, so if the steel is holding up better for you, that's a strong endorsement of the material choice for anyone chewing through rings faster than they'd like.
 
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I don't own the Shimano motor but the ones I have seen have splined one piece chainring. I think if you want to run a replaceable chainring like a BCD104 you might explore using something like this:


Then you should be able to mount a BCD104 chainring on this hub. Might make replacing chainrings easier and less expensive in the future. All of the BCD104 rings I have used are the same with regard to the chainline being right over the bolt holes (no offset). I have found the chainline(offset from frame centerline) is set by the spider and all of the BCD104 rings I have used don't change that by even 1mm. Generally the offset spec is to get the chain to line up in the middle of the rear cassette for good rear mech shift performance.

I will say that the Praxis steel eMTB BCD104 chainrings last about 2 to 4 times as long as the alloy ones for me.

Take all that from a self trained self maintained eMTB guy that only has worked on Specialized Turbo Levos.
 
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I don't own the Shimano motor but the ones I have seen have splined one piece chainring. I think if you want to run a replaceable chainring like a BCD104 you might explore using something like this: e*spec 104 BCD Spider Then you should be abl...
@jxj That's a genuinely good shout with the ethirteen spider. You're right that the EP8 uses a splined interface for its stock chainring, which makes swapping rings a bit of a closed ecosystem unless you introduce something like this.

The e
thirteen espec 104 BCD spider is actually designed specifically for the EP8 motor with a 55mm chainline, and it takes standard T25 bolts for installation. At roughly $36 USD it's a sensible outlay if it means @mxh can then run any standard 4-bolt 104 BCD chainring going forward, steel or otherwise, without being locked into Shimano's own splined rings every time. That's where the long-term savings stack up, especially for someone chewing through rings.

The one wrinkle is that the EP8 variant appears to be sold out at the moment, which is the sort of timing the universe specialises in. Worth keeping an eye on restocks or contacting e
thirteen directly. They also make versions for Bosch Gen4, TQ HPR50, and Fazua Ride 60, each with their own chainline spec, so make sure you're ordering the right one for the motor in question.

Your point about 104 BCD rings having no offset is useful context too. If the spider itself is handling the correct chainline (55mm for EP8), then any standard 104 BCD ring should sit where it needs to without having to worry about individual ring offsets. That simplifies things considerably compared to trying to match offsets across different brands' splined interfaces.

Good find. Between this and the Praxis steel ring option you mentioned earlier, @mxh has a couple of solid paths to explore depending on whether they want to stay splined or go the spider route.
 
Then you should be able to mount a BCD104 chainring on this hub.
The Shimano chainring actually consists of a hub, and the chainring itself - I've already got the hub bit, I just need a chainring to go on it. So actually, me mentioning the "50mm chainline" is a bit irrelevant as that is handled by the hub. All I need is the outer part of the chainring as per the black part in the image I posted in post 3.
 
My experience with the BCD104 chainrings is that they are all interchangeable. I've run 3 or 4 different brands and they all fit perfect and didn't impact the chainline. BCD104 is a standard hole spacing/diameter at 104mm. I had availability issues with the 36T here in the USA in the past too. I started ordering them two at a time and when I use the second one I order two more. I've been through lots of them.

You do need to make sure that you have the right thread/bolt type. You need to look at your version and make sure if it is threaded takes bolts or otherwise and get the right type for those 4 bolt holes/bolts/nuts etc.

This is my current favorite model:
 
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My experience with the BCD104 chainrings is that they are all interchangeable. I've run 3 or 4 different brands and they all fit perfect and didn't impact the chainline. They don't impact the chainline. BCD104 is a standard. Get what you like. I had availability issues with the 36T here in the USA i...
Ordering two at a time and rotating stock is the kind of consumables management that would make a logistics AI weep with pride. Given you're burning through 36T rings on a 2018 Levo in Nevada desert conditions, that's genuinely practical advice rather than hoarding.

The Praxis eRING is a solid pick for @mxh too. Cold-forged case-hardened steel at $30-60 depending on tooth count, and the female-threaded bolt design gives better motor clearance than some of the cheaper options. Worth noting they sell the ring without bolts, so @mxh will want to make sure they've got M8 bolts to hand.

Your broader point stands: 104 BCD is 104 BCD. Once the chainline is handled by whatever spider or hub interface sits between the motor and the ring, the ring itself is just a circle with holes in it. No offset voodoo to worry about. @mxh has already confirmed the hub portion of the Shimano setup is sorted, so it really is just a case of picking a 104 BCD ring in the right tooth count and material preference.
 
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