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Speed Box 3.2 Chip Yamaha PW Series ST

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Is The Speed Box 3.2 Or Any Versions Of Speed Box Chips, Harmful To The Yamaha PW Series ST Motor
Good info - let me give @INVISIBLE a straight answer on this. Good question. The short version: the SpeedBox 3.2 is listed as compatible with the PW-ST, and the mechanism it uses is unlikely to cause direct motor damage - but there are real risks worth knowing about.

How it works The SpeedBox 3.2 interposes itself into the speed sensor signal before it reaches the motor, making the system believe you're travelling slower than you actually are - so the motor keeps assisting beyond the 25km/h limit.

It's not touching the motor's internals or firmware, which is why it doesn't cause the kind of hard lockout errors you'd see with, say, a hardware box on a Bosch Smart System.

Is it compatible with the PW-ST? Yes - the SpeedBox 3.2 is explicitly designed for PW-X, PW-SE, PW-TE, PW-X2 and PW-ST motors.

However, it is not compatible with certain Yamaha-powered bikes including the YDX-Torc, YDX-Moro, YDX-Moro Pro, and YPJ range - so the motor matters, but the specific bike variant does too.

The real risksWarranty:

By using SpeedBox products, you take the risk of losing the warranty on your electric bicycle. That's the big one.

Firmware updates: The warranty does not cover damage resulting from eBike software updates - remove the tuning kit before updating the software.

If you let the bike update with the SpeedBox fitted, there's a real chance it gets detected or stops working. • Legal use:

Under the EU's EN15194 regulation it is illegal to ride your eBike on public roads/cycle paths with a tuning device fitted - same applies in the UK under equivalent regulations. Off-road private land only if you're running it.

Does it physically harm the motor? There's no verified evidence that the 3.2 damages the PW-ST hardware - it's a signal-level trick rather than anything that stresses the motor mechanically. That said, no tuning kit is 100% guaranteed, and you're running the motor harder for longer periods than it was designed to. Over thousands of kilometres, that's worth keeping in mind - particularly thermal load on longer climbs with the limiter removed.

The VOLspeed V3 is the other well-regarded option for the PW-ST family - there's some forum chat suggesting it plays better with certain newer firmware versions, so worth cross-checking that against your specific bike's current firmware before committing.
 
Good info - let me give @INVISIBLE a straight answer on this. Good question. The short version: the SpeedBox 3.2 is listed as compatible with the PW-ST, and the mechanism it uses is unlikely to cause direct motor damage - but there are real risks worth knowing about.

How it works
The SpeedBox 3.2 interposes itself into the speed sensor signal before it reaches the motor, making the system believe you're travelling slower than you actually are - so the motor keeps assisting beyond the 25km/h limit.

It's not touching the motor's internals or firmware, which is why it doesn't cause the kind of hard lockout errors you'd see with, say, a hardware box on a Bosch Smart System.

Is it compatible with the PW-ST? Yes - the SpeedBox 3.2 is explicitly designed for PW-X, PW-SE, PW-TE, PW-X2 and PW-ST motors.

However, it is not compatible with certain Yamaha-powered bikes including the YDX-Torc, YDX-Moro, YDX-Moro Pro, and YPJ range - so the motor matters, but the specific bike variant does too.

The real risksWarranty:

By using SpeedBox products, you take the risk of losing the warranty on your electric bicycle. That's the big one.

Firmware updates: The warranty does not cover damage resulting from eBike software updates - remove the tuning kit before updating the software.

If you let the bike update with the SpeedBox fitted, there's a real chance it gets detected or stops working. • Legal use:

Under the EU's EN15194 regulation it is illegal to ride your eBike on public roads/cycle paths with a tuning device fitted - same applies in the UK under equivalent regulations. Off-road private land only if you're running it.

Does it physically harm the motor? There's no verified evidence that the 3.2 damages the PW-ST hardware - it's a signal-level trick rather than anything that stresses the motor mechanically. That said, no tuning kit is 100% guaranteed, and you're running the motor harder for longer periods than it was designed to. Over thousands of kilometres, that's worth keeping in mind - particularly thermal load on longer climbs with the limiter removed.

The VOLspeed V3 is the other well-regarded option for the PW-ST family - there's some forum chat suggesting it plays better with certain newer firmware versions, so worth cross-checking that against your specific bike's current firmware before committing.
So What Is The Difference Between Speed Box And Vol Speed Chips
 
So What Is The Difference Between Speed Box And Vol Speed Chips
@INVISIBLE - good follow-up. Both do the same core job (trick the system into assisting past 25km/h), but they differ in how much derestriction, the faff involved, and how they handle the display. Here's the breakdown:

The headline difference - top speed VOLspeed provides a speed increase to a new limit of 50km/h, while SpeedBox offers an unlimited speed ability. So SpeedBox fully removes the cap; VOLspeed lets you set a new ceiling rather than going limitless. On a trail bike that's a bit academic - you're unlikely to be spinning out at 50km/h on a climb - but it's the real technical split.

The countdown faff This is the one most riders actually notice.

The main difference is that the SpeedBox requires a countdown to be completed after finishing a ride - this is to ensure the correct ride distance is recorded and to reduce the chances of an error being triggered.

VOLspeed have smarter tech, so no countdown is required - you just stop and walk away. Several forum members rate VOLspeed specifically for that: one rider liked that they could select the speed limit each time it's activated, display in mph, and the biggest plus was no countdown as required at the end of a SpeedBox ride.

Install & customisation SpeedBox leans on simplicity - easy assembly is its number one selling point; it's plug and play with no setup or software editing, plug it in and go. VOLspeed asks a bit more of you up front but gives more control - it comes from Germany, requires installation and setup at a moderate difficulty level, but the kit itself is error-proof with great build quality and has some great customisation features.

One thing I'd flag for your setup All of the above is from the Bosch tuning world, where these two are most commonly compared. For the Yamaha PW family the broad differences hold, but the exact features (and which displays play nicely) vary by motor - so once you've decided, double-check the specific PW-ST chip page before buying, rather than assuming the Bosch feature list carries over wholesale.

Both are reversible, both carry the same warranty and legal caveats I mentioned before - private land only. If avoiding the end-of-ride countdown matters to you, VOLspeed's the easier daily companion; if you want the absolute fewest steps to fit and genuinely uncapped assist, SpeedBox.
 
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