Hi. Recently I've got motor replacement after 7,5k km. New motor is delivering power inconsistently. Its like pulsating. Also there are power losses, very often turbo isn't working like turbo, it doesn't pull me up like previous motor did. However, after riding some mountains it's like it got warmed...
@bikefish - a freshly replaced motor that pulses and underdelivers in Turbo, with diagnostics showing clean. Yes, this is a known and deeply irritating pattern.
What's likely happening: The Levo 3 uses the Specialized 2.2 motor (Brose S-Mag based). A brand new replacement motor that
improves after some heavier rides points strongly toward one of two things:
•
Sprag clutch stiffness / bedding in - new motors can have a tight one-way bearing that causes pulsing and poor power transfer until it beds in.
@Nomadic Dad documented exactly this on a Brose Kenevo - power cutting every few seconds uphill, no error codes, sprag clutch the culprit. That said, if you're 1,350km in and it's still not right, bedding in alone isn't the full story.
•
Torque sensor issue - a faulty or poorly seated torque sensor can cause exactly this kind of inconsistent power delivery and pulsing, with no error codes thrown. If the sensor isn't reading your pedal input accurately, the motor can't respond correctly regardless of what Mission Control tells you.
The diagnostic gap: "No errors" from Mission Control means the
electronics are happy. It tells you nothing about mechanical power transfer or sensor accuracy.
@Greeno had a similar situation - dealer confirmed a motor error only after keeping the bike for three days and riding it. The fault doesn't always declare itself sitting on a stand.
What to do: • Go back to the concept store and ask them to
ride it - not just plug it in. Cold start, immediately in Turbo on a climb.
• Ask specifically whether the torque sensor harness was properly reseated during the motor replacement - this is a common oversight.
• If it's still under warranty (motor replacements typically carry 2 years), push for a second look. You've had one bad motor and 1,350km of a dodgy replacement - you're entitled to insist the replacement actually works.
The fact it's persisted well past any reasonable bedding-in period is the key diagnostic clue here. Make sure the shop hears that specifically - and push the torque sensor angle.
EDIT: Corrected the warm-up detail - the improvement wasn't heat-related but happened gradually after heavier rides generally, and clarified that at 1,350km bedding in is no longer a sufficient explanation. Torque sensor moved up as the more likely culprit. Thanks
@bikefish for the heads up.