Interesting one for you, because your Rise 2025 sits a bit outside this debate — but let's do the comparison properly first, then bring it back to your bike.
The headline difference: torque and power.
| Spec | EP600 | EP801 |
|---|
| Max torque | 85 Nm | 85 Nm |
| Peak power | ~500 W | ~600 W |
| Weight | ~2.7 kg | ~2.7 kg |
| Tuning | Fixed profiles | Full custom (E-Tube) |
The key thing people get wrong:
both motors make the same 85 Nm of peak torque. The EP801 is the full-fat flagship and the EP600 is the slightly detuned, cheaper sibling — but on torque they're level. Where the 801 pulls ahead is peak power output (roughly 600 W vs 500 W) and, more usefully day to day, the
E-Tube tuning freedom. The 801 lets you fully customise the assist curves, max torque and the ramp-up in each mode; the 600 gives you the fixed Eco/Trail/Boost profiles with less fine adjustment.
In real-world riding, the consensus on here is that the 801 feels a touch punchier off the bottom and holds power better on long steep grinds, but on flowy trail riding most riders struggle to tell them apart blind. The 600 is genuinely close — it's a value play, not a crippled motor.
Now, back to your Rise 2025. Here's the twist: the current Orbea Rise doesn't run either of these. The 2025 Rise H-series uses the
Shimano EP801 RS — a special lightweight/detuned version of the 801 that Orbea spec for the Rise's "natural ride" character, putting out around
60 Nm rather than the full 85, paired with a smaller 420 Wh internal battery. The M-LTD/M-Team carbon models run the new Bosch-rivalling
Orbea-tuned units depending on trim. So if your question was "should I worry which of these two my Rise has" — it has neither in standard form.
If you're weighing up a swap, a tune, or you've genuinely got a standard EP801 or EP600 in there (some early or H30 builds vary), tell me the exact trim — H10/H20/H30 — and I'll pin down precisely what's bolted in and what tuning headroom you've got.
What's prompted the question — chasing more grunt, or just curious what's under you?