slickrock
Well-known member
Now, there are always growing pains for a Gen-1 product in a new product space like the Pinion MGU, but initial good faith is to put those issues aside and celebrate what a no-derailleur, belt-drive design can do for a full suspension EMTB, where the suspension is utterly opened up, without sensations of pedal kickback and other chain-whip effects hampering performance. Earlier adopters have rung these sentiments, and while I don’t have such a bike, I fully understand this as I’ve used internal geared belt drive MTBs for year now.
But I can’t quite past some glaring design characteristics with the Pinion and a few other MGU’s in the pipelines that in my mind will keep this tech from taking off, namely: it’s weight, size, and mechanical complexity. Gearboxes are mechanically complex and e-bike motors are electro-mechanically complex and what I see in the design of the Pinon MGU is basically one mechanism grafted onto the other and put in a single box. It feels like an additive solution rather than a reductive solution: IOW, more weight, more complexity, and all inside a bigger box. This theme can be seen in other MGU solutions, like the positively huge Effigear/Valeo MGU. Intradrive, another player, seems to have realized this and is trying to keep their MGU paired down by providing far less gearing than what is available in the Pinion, which is really a kind of compromise. So what I feel the MGU segment needs is a truly reductive solution that can squarely take on the weight, size, and complexity of the whole product product space. Luckily, there seems to an MGU design approach that can achieve such a feat: the E-CVT.
For some time know I’ve been follow the MGU space and took keen interest in a few companies working on continuously variable transmissions for EMTB, but first, I have to give credit to cyclingabout, who recently produced and article and video on E-CVTs, and as far as I know, seems to have coined the term in the e-bike space, though the term can be easily found in the automotive space. I suggest you watch the video to understand what E-CVT brings to table and spares me from going over the details here. But I think the biggest thing to get over is the CVT term itself, which in many circles is stigmatic, with ideas of ramping pulleys, rubbing belts, other rotating ball mechanisms that rob power in motor cars or rob rider pedaling efficiency and feel (think Nuvinci hubs). E-CVT is nothing like this. Rather, it’s like the hybrid transmission inside of the Honda Prius.
A hybrid car has two power sources: the gas-powered engine and the battery-powered electric motor. The E-CVT elegantly combines these two power sources in a simple planetary gear layout, to produce torque to drive the wheels. Replace the gas-powered engine with a carbohydrate-powered human, and you get the exact same effect with a E-CVT MGU. Now the real magic here is in the secondary motor that drives directly controls gear ratios steplessly, but also adds torque in concert with the main motor (this vlogger video at the 2:25 to 4:30 time mark goes into greater detail). Thus, no sliding pulleys, belt ramps, rotating balls, or sprag clutches in a mechanical CVT, but also no intricate, multifarious, clanking, friction-laden, and noisy sliding gears to change transmission speeds of a mechanical gearbox; rather, a much simpler, lighter and compact design, with an order of magnitude less gears. And the E-CVT design also does away with the freewheel that’s built into existing e-bike motors.
Because the gearing is completely handled with electric motor forces, the E-CVT sports some other features not available to other gearbox (or derailleurs for that matter) solutions:
- Instantaneous and tunable torque response: the variable gearing, and hence torque response, can be electronically tuned to maximize power response, motor efficiency, or riding mode. Currently, e-bike motors do this within each gear, providing power delivery with user switchable modes (e.g. Eco, EMTB, Race), but image if these modes could also integrate gearing continuously, beyond the limits of any particular gear you happen to be in. Now this might sound a lot like automatic shifting, which currently leaves a lot to be desired (e.g. SRAM, I2, Pinion MGU) due to choosing the wrong gear or not being able to anticipate gear shifting in MTB scenarios. But having motor-driven continuous gearing sidesteps the need to force the choice into a limited number of gears and having to potentially run through the whole range before getting to the gear that makes sense for any given particular condition. The effect can drastically increase the responsiveness of the motor to rider input. For example take a look at this Eurobike video with a vlogger demoing a bike with a Revonte One. At around the 10:45 time mark, notice how quickly the bike takes off when pedal power is applied, with no pauses in shifting or marked changes in cadence.
- Virtual Manual Shifting: Because the continuous gearing is continuous and electronic, the motor can of course provide manual-like button shifting based on rider selection like with today’s EMTBs, with the added capability to choose gear count, inter-gear range spacing, and gear skipping to suite rider styles and riding conditions. And of course the gear shifting would be instantaneous.
- The ability to offer regenerative braking. The effect would be similar to way a Tesla operates, where pressing the accelerator speeds the car but letting off the gas slows its down, like downshifting and hence charging the battery. (Many years ago this was a strange concept compared way we drive ICE cars but now it seems second hand to BEV owners.) For EMTB, this would require a fixed rear hub to work and a spinning belt when coasting. For EMTB, it may be too strange to always pedal, except when wanting to slow down, but it may make sense for city bikes.
- Smaller batteries: With the combination of E-CVT efficiency and possibly regenerative braking, you could live with a smaller battery without sacrificing range for given power mode. And with obvious weight savings.
- Less maintenance. Internal electric motors themselves, tend to last, but the mechanical components of an e-bike often wear/fail first. The simpler the transmission the less likely the maintenance (grease vs. oil bath).
- Improved miniaturization of mid-drive MGUs: there are limits to shrinking gearboxes because of the mechanical complexity, but shrinking shrinking E-CVT transmission and making them more powerful (Think TQ for size and DGI for power) is more feasible for mid-power bikes.
- Ability to operate in reverse. An interesting parlor trick for sure, or perhaps a kind of reverse walk mode, but at least a useful feature for cargo bikes.
Now one fundamental downside of E-CVTs is the seemingly lack of a degraded mode. Currently if your EMTB motor dies, your mechanical gears are still there to get you home, but if power-fails to an E-CVT, it’s possible the gearing could just “disappear” [edit: or drop to the lowest gear] - a virtual version of losing your chain. Hopefully, as the technology evolves, there could be ways to address this issue like some kind of mechanical override, or magnetic transmission or some kind baseline reversion gear ratio mechanism, etc.
The E-CVT video cited above discusses a number of players in this space, but IMO, I feel only two of them seem to have the most promising designs:
- Revonte One: this motor is perhaps the closest design as what I described above, but this Finnish company went into receivership 2 years ago and its IP went up for sale and was purchased, I believe, though what company bought it was not made public.
- Villeger Dynamic: This motor sounds (suspiciously?) similar on paper to the Revonte One, but is markedly lighter. It also sports a built-in belt tensioner, which is super ingenious because gearbox and MGU transmissions are all over the place when it comes to tensioner design and placement, with some being quite crude and heavy. Unfortunately, the company has been quiet for a year now. Maybe we will see something at the upcoming Eurobike in a weeks time.
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