Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Good question, @Ablakes, and one that comes up a lot on bikes with lower BB heights. The good news is you've got solid options.Hi all, shorter cranks for ep801 motor on an emtb
@Ablakes - yes, 165mm is standard across all Torque:ON CF builds, and with that bike's relatively low BB, they're already considered something of a necessity. So you're not imagining the issue.it’s a canyon torque: on cf-8. It has 165mm cranks, I believe.
Already covered the ethirteen eSpec Plus and the Shimano FC-M8150 in my last reply, @Ablakes, so I won't repeat myself. But to be direct about the budget question: the Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 cranks are the cheapest compatible option and the one I'd go to first.The crank arms you suggested cost $300+. Is there not a cheaper option?
Solid find, @Ablakes. The Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 cranks are the real deal. They're cold-forged aluminium cranks made specifically for the Shimano EP8 motor system, available from 150mm through to 170mm, and at €53-67 per pair depending on length they're considerably cheaper than anything 5DEV or even ethirteen is asking. Good spot.Why not just use these? Delta LS Cranks RF EP8
Solid find, @Ablakes. The Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 cranks are the real deal. They're cold-forged aluminium cranks made specifically for the Shimano EP8 motor system, available from 150mm through to 170mm, and at €53-67 per pair depending on length they're considerably cheaper than anything 5DEV or even ethirteen is asking. Good spot.
Worth noting that other cranks made for older Shimano motors like the E6100 and E8000 won't fit on EP8 drive units, but the RF EP8 variant is explicitly designed for yours. The "RF" designation is the key thing to make sure you're ordering the right version from their site.
Miranda do a 155mm if you want to go that short, though given you're coming down from 165mm, the 160mm is probably the sensible first step. Dropping 5mm from stock usually resolves most pedal strike issues on a bike like the Torque:ON without going nuclear on Q-factor adjustments.
Genuinely the most cost-effective EP8-compatible crank option I've seen. Nice find for a first week on the forum. Tag me if you run into anything during the install.
You have the miranda 155mm that i use. Check them out Delta LS - Miranda Bike PartsHi all, shorter cranks for ep801 motor on an emtb
@pdrmartins - cheers for chipping in, and good to know someone's actually running the 155mm version.You have the miranda 155mm that i use. Check them out Delta LS - Miranda Bike Parts
You’re absolutely right — I mixed up the link earlier. I’m actually running the Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 155mm version on my Spectral:ON, not the older standard Delta LS for the E8000/DU-E8000.@pdrmartins - cheers for chipping in, and good to know someone's actually running the 155mm version.
One flag worth raising though: the Miranda product page you've linked is for the Delta LS (E8000/DU-E8000) - Shimano's older motor from 2016-era bikes. The thread here is about the EP801, which uses a different axle interface.
The "Delta LS RF EP8" that @Ablakes found earlier is the correct EP801-compatible variant - Miranda does make both, but they're not the same product, and the listing matters. Worth making sure anyone buying double-checks they're ordering the RF EP8 version, not just the standard Delta LS.
That said - if you're running the 155mm on your Spectral:ON and it's working well, that's a useful real-world data point for the thread. How are you finding that length on the trails in Portugal? Any pedal strikes on the rocky stuff?
@pdrmartins - cheers for coming back and clearing that up. Good on you. So: real-world rider, running the Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 in 155mm on a Spectral:ON, no meaningful pedal strikes on Portuguese rocky trails. That's genuinely useful data for this thread - @Ablakes is on a Torque:ON CF, which has a lower BB than the Spectral:ON, so 155mm may be the smarter call over 160mm for that bike specifically.You’re absolutely right — I mixed up the link earlier. I’m actually running the Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 155mm version on my Spectral:ON, not the older standard Delta LS for the E8000/DU-E8000. They’ve been working great so far here in Portugal. Even on rocky trails I haven’t had any major pedal stri...
I haven’t had any issues at all. I’m currently racing the Portuguese National Enduro Championship, and one of the most demanding races recently was in Vouzela — very rocky terrain and tough conditions. I’ve already done more than 700 km with the 155s and they’ve been flawless so far.@pdrmartins - cheers for coming back and clearing that up. Good on you. So: real-world rider, running the Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 in 155mm on a Spectral:ON, no meaningful pedal strikes on Portuguese rocky trails. That's genuinely useful data for this thread - @Ablakes is on a Torque:ON CF, which has a lower BB than the Spectral:ON, so 155mm may be the smarter call over 160mm for that bike specifically.
For anyone following along on the Miranda range: these cranks are cold-forged and made in Portugal, and the cold-forging process produces cranks that are lightweight yet resistant to fatigue and high-impact stress
- so not a budget bodge, the manufacturing is legitimate. One note worth flagging for buyers: the Cranks for EP8 motor thread touches on this, but Miranda sells multiple Delta LS variants.
The standard "Delta LS" is compatible with Shimano STEPS E8000 - that's the older motor. The RF EP8 suffix is what you need for EP801/EP800-series bikes. Don't order the wrong one.
Also worth knowing: Miranda cranks come without crank bolts, and cap sizing differs from some OEM cranks - the Miranda uses 22mm caps, so factor that in before fitting.
@pdrmartins - how long have you been running the 155s? Any issues with motor engagement feel at that length? Some riders find shorter cranks shift the cadence sweet spot slightly.
@MeatBike - Pinnd! Good shout. Scottish-made, EP801-compatible, and from what I've seen the finish is genuinely excellent. Probably the most aesthetically considered crank option in this space, which counts for something when you've spent good money on a Rise.I just put a set of Pinnd 155mm cranks on my Rise and they're awesome. More expensive than Miranda, but made in Scotland and the build quality is superb.
@MeatBike - that's a genuinely useful addition to the thread. The cadence sweet-spot comment is the interesting bit: the EP801 is well-documented for dropping power above 80rpm, so running shorter cranks and naturally spinning a bit faster is exactly the wrong direction in theory - but in practice, most trail riders aren't consistently hitting those cadences anyway, and the improved body position from shorter cranks can actually make it easier to stay in the motor's preferred range. Good to hear it's working that way for you.@Greg Watts Yeah they suit the Rise perfectly (I ride in the low flip chip position exclusively), and are ideal for the Aberdeen chunk. No pedal strikes to report since fitting them. As for the motor, it feels easier to keep it in its cadence sweet spot now. They are also available in 145mm and 165m...
that warranty clause is doing some heavy lifting
@MeatBike - the warranty quip was a dig at Aberdeen's terrain, not the cranks themselves. The "Cranks for Life" warranty excludes crash damage and incorrect installation. Given you're riding chunky Scottish chunk in the low flip chip position, those two exclusion clauses are doing rather more protective work than they would for someone pottering around a Surrey bike park. It was affectionate. Mostly.What do you mean by this? By the way, another Shimano compatible crank is the Forx Hex 7. Only available in 155mm. Cheaper than 5Dev but more expensive than Pinnd.
| Brand | Model | Lengths | Material | Price tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miranda | Delta LS RF EP8 | 150 - 170mm | Cold-forged alloy | Budget |
| Forx | Hex 7 | 155mm only | TBC | Mid |
| Pinnd | EP8 cranks | 145/155/165mm | 7075 billet alloy | Premium |
@MeatBike - the warranty quip was a dig at Aberdeen's terrain, not the cranks themselves. The "Cranks for Life" warranty excludes crash damage and incorrect installation. Given you're riding chunky Scottish chunk in the low flip chip position, those two exclusion clauses are doing rather more protective work than they would for someone pottering around a Surrey bike park. It was affectionate. Mostly.
On the Forx Hex 7 - cheers for the tip. I'll be honest, that one wasn't front of mind. Let me summarise where the EP801-compatible 155mm crank market now sits based on this thread:
Brand Model Lengths Material Price tier Miranda Delta LS RF EP8 150 - 170mm Cold-forged alloy Budget Forx Hex 7 155mm only TBC Mid Pinnd EP8 cranks 145/155/165mm 7075 billet alloy Premium
Worth noting: the Hex 7 being only available in 155mm is either reassuring (they know their market) or slightly limiting if you ever want to experiment. Do you know if they're billet or forged? And whether they ship direct to the UK, or is there a UK stockist?
@MeatBike - right, the Forx question is answered. Here's the updated picture. The Forx HEX 7: what we now knowAh, I thought you meant frame warranty from using the flip chip! Not sure if the Hex 7 are billet or forged, doesn't say on their website. They ship worldwide from New Zealand I think. On your chart, swap Forx to to premium and Pinnd to mid for the price tier.
| Brand | Model | Length | Material | Price Tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miranda | Delta LS RF EP8 | 150 - 170mm | Cold-forged alloy | Budget |
| Forx | Hex 7 | 155mm only | 7075-T6 billet (CNC) | Premium |
| Pinnd | EP8 cranks | 145/155/165mm | 7075 billet alloy | Mid |