Bergamont's E-line Sweep N8 Di2 (hereafter: the Sweep) is a really good quality urban bike from a brand that's huge over on the Continent but just starting to make inroads into the UK. Shimano's new STePS bottom bracket drive is excellent and mates really well with the electronically controlled Nexus 8-speed hub, and the rest of the bike is crammed with quality too. It's by no means cheap, but if you're looking for a reliable electric bike to run in place of a second car, it's just the kind of thing you need.
You may not have heard of Bergamont, but it's a big deal the other side of the Channel. It has a full range of road, mountain, cyclo-cross, city and kids' bikes; the e-bikes are coming into the UK via the Electric Bike Company and this Sweep nestles in the middle of its range, which runs all the way up to the £3,499 E-Ville Di2.
Find your nearest dealer here
There are various builds of the Sweep, and the one we tested, with a Di2-controlled Nexus 8-speed hub, is the most expensive. It's available in the same build with a step-through frame.
Shimano STePS: a great power system that integrates well with Di2
This is the first bike we've tested with Shimano's STePS e-bike system. Like the market-leading Bosch Intuvia, it's a bottom bracket system. The motor unit includes the cranks and it needs a special frame design to be mounted. There are a number of advantages to this setup.
Firstly, the weight of the motor is centralised and low down, so it doesn't affect the bike's handling very much. Secondly, it's not rotating in the wheel so cabling and wheel removal is easier. Thirdly, it makes sensing pedal input a lot easier. The one major downside is that you can't have any regenerative braking for recharging the battery, but as we'll see that's not a major issue here.

You get a centrally mounted display and, on this bike, two satellite controls. One controls the motor and the second is for shifting the Nexus 8-speed hub, which is controlled via Shimano's Di2. Each control has up and down arrows (assist level for the motor, ratio for the hub) and each has a third button which toggles through the various screens on the display. It's a backlit LCD unit and gives you the normal data you'd get from a computer – speed, distance, time – as well as specific motor data (battery level, range, assist level) and a display showing what gear you're in.
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The STePS system is pedal-assist only, with a 250W motor (the legal maximum in the EU for a standard e-bike) and a 418Wh Lithium-Ion battery mounted on the down tube. There are three power assist levels: Eco, Normal and High. In Eco mode Shimano claims the battery is good for about 125km of assistance, and as you ask for more help the range decreases. The battery swings out so you can take it indoors to charge it.

It's a really good quality system, this. The obvious comparison is with the Bosch system, which works in a similar way and will set you back a similar amount. And they're really very similar. The STePS unit is perhaps a bit more eager: you'll fly up the climbs on this bike, without even breaking a sweat. My commute home has a 3km, 5% climb with the steepest section about 13%, and this bike made it just ridiculously easy. Stick the motor on high, spin the legs and you'll be at the top before you've even registered the climb.
Every time I get an e-bike to test, someone will say: 'It's so heavy! Wouldn't you just be better buying a nice light road bike?' To which the answer is an unequivocal no. You only have to try a long climb once on a good quality e-bike to understand what a big difference it makes. This is 250W of extra push: that's not a long way off my Functional Threshold Power. So imagine yourself climbing on quite a heavy bike, with a second you pushing you up the climb more or less as hard as you can.
This bike has a Nexus Di2 hub as well, and the two systems share a control bus and do some clever things together. The Nexus 8-speed hub is a reliable unit but it has a few foibles, one of which is that it's not keen to shift when it's being driven. So, if you apply constant pressure to the pedals and shift it up or down, it'll tend to stay in the same gear until you slack off. The Sweep has a neat trick: when you shift the hub, it cuts the power for half a second or so, enough for the hub to switch ratios, before turning the power back on again. It doesn't work every time – if you're pushing hard on the pedals it can still stick in gear, but generally you're not pushing hard, that's the motor's job.

The other neat trick is that you can set a starting gear. If you pull up to the lights and stop, after a couple of seconds the hub will shift back to the chosen gear on its own. It defaults to third gear, which is just about right.
The gearing overall is about right, in fact. There's not much by way of top-end ratios but this is a bike for cruising around on. It's only assisted up to 25kph and that's as fast as you'll ever really want to go, unless you're pointing its 23kg mass downhill. There are plenty of climbing gears, too; I rarely went below third, but that means there are two more gears for anyone who needs a bit more help, and that's a good thing.

The STePS system isn't maybe quite as refined as the Bosch motor. It's a little bit choppier under power, especially in the high setting. But overall it's excellent and I've no real complaints. The battery life is similar too. The magic 125km is pie in the sky for anyone who lives near a hill, or weighs more than Nairo Quintana. I was averaging about 50-55km. That's doing a lot of climbing, in Normal and High modes, and pootling around on the flat the rest of the time in Eco.
It's not a huge range but realisitically it's unlikely you'd be doing more than that in a day, and if you were you'd probably be doing less hilly stuff than I was, which would eke out your range a bit. More likely you'd be looking at a bike like this as an alternative to a car for town duties, or maybe a 5-10 mile commute, so one charge a day (or every couple of days) would see you right.
If you did want to extend your range then you can easily sling the charger in a bag. It's not quick to recharge but it'd be long full by the time you'd finished a full day's work, for example.
The rest of the bike is good too
The Sweep matches that excellent drive system with some really good quality kit, and it all fits together into a really nicely considered bike. The Nexus hub at the back is paired with an SP-PV8 dynohub at the front, and the Sweep features Curana C-Lite mudguards with integrated front and rear lights. The front sits under the front edge of the mudguard and the rear is recessed into the 'guard, with the wiring running internally. It's a very neat system and you get always-on running lights for a bit of extra visibility around town. After dark the front isn't quite enough to see by on unlit lanes, but it's fine around town under streetlights, and it's one less thing to remember.

Stopping is courtesy of Magura HS-11 hydraulic rim brakes. They've never really caught on in the UK but you see them everywhere on the Continent. They're powerful and fairly easy to set up and maintain, with the linear brake pad path meaning you get even wear throughout. I'd pick discs given the choice on a bike like this, but I had no trouble stopping and the Schwalbe Marathon Racer tyres have plenty of grip.

The Sweep has a 640mm flat bar with ergo grips, which gives you a nice comfy position. If you wanted a more upright ride you could easily switch it out for one with some backward sweep. The Selle Royal saddle I found a bit ordinary but it's fine for shorter journeys.

The Sweep comes with a Porteur rack at the front and a pannier rack at the rear. The rear rack is functional enough and I had no issues with any of the panniers I tried. The front rack looks good but it's less useful, because it's bolted to the fork not the frame and so when you load it up it affects the steering quite markedly. Stick a crate of beer in there and it's easy enough once you're going, but after stopping at the lights you'll need to muscle the bar a bit to keep it straight as you set off. It'd be better if it was frame mounted.

Generally the ride is good: the stiffness of the alloy frame and fork is mitigated a bit by the 35mm Schwalbe tyres and the good grips, less so by the rather wooden saddle. The steering is reasonably slow but the bike is predictable and stable at most speeds, even barrelling downhill.

Position-wise, I was using the smaller of two sizes that would probably be fine for me, and the larger would have offered a slightly more upright position which, to be honest, I might have preferred. On the flip side the smaller frame meant my wife could ride the Bergamont too, and her experience of it mirrored mine: the STePS system is very good and it's a likeable bike overall. There's a decent stack of spacers for adjusting your bar height, but no adjustable stem like you often see on bikes like this.
Overall: a high-quality e-bike for day-in, day-out use
Realistically you'll only be looking at forking out £2,400 on an e-bike if you think you'll get your money's worth out of it. It's a big outlay, but if you were running this bike instead of a second car then you'd probably be up on the deal after less than two years. There's minimal maintenance needed on a hub-geared bike like this and it costs pennies to charge the battery up overnight, so running costs are next to nothing.

Not everyone wants to use their commute to hone their fitness; there are lots of people for whom a bike would be the ideal way to get around on a day-to-day basis if it was a bit easier. Take my home town, Bath, as an example: it's only a couple of miles into the centre so cycling would be perfect, if only half the city wasn't up a massive hill.
This bike makes it easy, wherever you live and whatever your level of fitness, and you can cycle in just because it's easy to park and you don't get stuck in traffic, and you don't have to worry about arriving a sweaty mess. Obviously some people will tell you're cheating. Cheating at what? Going to work?
Electric bikes aren't for everyone. But they make a lot of sense as a transport option for a broad range of people. And this Bergamont is a really good example of an electric city bike. The Shimano STePS system is excellent, the build is solid and the ride is good for getting around town.
Verdict
Shimano's excellent STePS system and Di2 gears complete a really well-considered city bike
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road.cc test report
Make and model: Bergamont E-line Sweep N8 Di2
Size tested: n/a
About the bike
State the frame and fork material and method of construction. List the components used to build up the bike.
FRAME 28" URBAN E-BIKE, 6061 ALLOY SUPER LITE TUBING, T4/T6 HEAT TREATED, HYDRO FLUID FORMING, DOUBLE BUTTED, 3D-DROPOUT, URBAN GEOMETRY
FORK URBAN RIGID ALLOY FORK 28", 1 1/8", CROMO STEERER
SHIFTER SHIMANO NEXUS, SW-E6000, DI2 SHIFTER
FREEWHEEL SHIMANO, 20T
CHAIN KMC Z-610HXRB, ANTIRUST, HEAVY DUTY
CRANKSET BGM CRANK/SHIMANO FC-E6000, 38T, LENGTH: 170MM
BOTTOM BRACKET SHIMANO STEPS
GEAR RATIO 8-SPEED HUBGEAR, FRONT: 38T, REAR: 20T
MOTOR SHIMANO DRIVE UNIT STEPS, 36V, MAX. 25 KM/H
BATTERY SHIMANO STEPS 36 V LI ION, 418 WH, FRAME-TYPE
ASSISTANCE MODES HIGH/NORMAL/ECO/OFF
BRAKE MAGURA HS-11 PURE, HYDRAULIC RIM BRAKE, WITH QUICK RELEASE
BRAKELEVERS MAGURA HS-11 PURE, 4-FINGER
RIMS BGM RACE, 28", CNC-SIDE, 36H
FRONT HUB KT PV-8 DYNAMO HUB, 5MM ALLEN KEY AXLE, 36H
REAR HUB SHIMANO NEXUS DI2, SG-C6060, FREEWHEEL, 36H
SPOKES SAPIM LEADER, STAINLESS, SILVER
TIRES SCHWALBE MARATHON RACER, RACEGUARD, REFLECTIVE STRIPE, 35-622
TUBES SCHWALBE SV17A LIGHT 28/42-622/635
HEADSET FSA NO.11, A-HEADSET, SEMI INTEGRATED, ZS44/28.6 | ZS44/30 (1 1/8")
HANDLEBAR BGM PRO, FLATBAR, BACKSWEEP: 12°, WIDTH: 620/640/660MM FOR 48/52-56/60CM
STEM BGM PRO, 17°, LENGTH: 90/100/110MM FOR 48/52/56-60CM, CLAMP DIAMETER: 31.8MM
GRIPS BGM COMFORT, ERGO, DOUBLE DENSITY, CLAMP VERSION
SADDLE SELLE ROYAL MILO, GENT
SEATPOST BGM PRO, 2-BOLT DESIGN, 27.2MM, LENGTH: 350MM
FENDER CURANA C-LITE, ALLOY SANDWICH, WIDTH: 45MM
CARRIER CURANA, WITH INTEGRATED FENDER FIXING / BGM URBAN FRONT CARRIER
HEADLIGHT CURANA ILU, FENDER MOUNTED URBAN FRONTLIGHT, 15 LUX, STANDLIGHT
REARLIGHT CURANA ILU, FENDER MOUNTED URBAN REARLIGHT, STANDLIGHT
KICKSTAND ATRAN STYLO
PEDALS MARWI SP-823N
WEIGHT 23,0KG (52CM)
Tell us what the bike is for, and who it's aimed at. What do the manufacturers say about it? How does that compare to your own feelings about the bike?
28" Gent E-Bike with Shimano STePS Motor
Shimano Nexus Di2 8-speed Hubgear, electronic shifting
Hydraulic Magura HS11 Rim Brake
Front & Rear Carrier, lighting with standlight function
Frame and fork
Tell us about the build quality and finish of the frame and fork?
Well made, tidy welds, nice finish.
Tell us about the materials used in the frame and fork?
Alloy frame and fork.
Riding the bike
Was the bike comfortable to ride? Tell us how you felt about the ride quality.
Overall ride is reasonably firm, but it's a comfortable enough bike with a fairly leisurely position.
Did the bike feel stiff in the right places? Did any part of the bike feel too stiff or too flexible?
Everything felt nice and tight.
How did the bike transfer power? Did it feel efficient?
It's almost like it's doing the work for you…
Was there any toe-clip overlap with the front wheel? If so, was it a problem?
A little bit of overlap but with flat pedals it wasn't really an issue.
How would you describe the steering? Was it lively, neutral or unresponsive? Neutral to slow.
Tell us some more about the handling. How did the bike feel overall? Did it do particular things well or badly?
It's a cruiser, but that comes with the territory.
Which components had the most effect (good or bad) on the bike's comfort? would you recommend any changes?
The saddle wasn't a personal favourite but it was fine for the kinds of journeys you're likely to make on this bike.
Good power assist, clever Di2 system.
Good away from the lights.
It's not really for sprinting on.
Easy peasy.
The drivetrain
STePS motor is very good, Nexus hub is decent enough and better with Di2.
It's heavy but it's not an issue.
Wheels and tyres
Controls
Your summary
Did you enjoy riding the bike? Yes. A well-rounded e-bike.
Would you consider buying the bike? Yes if I wanted a high quality e-bike in place of a second car.
Would you recommend the bike to a friend? As above.
Use this box to explain your score
Not cheap, but a great quality e-bike that performs very well.
About the tester
Age: 42 Height: 189cm Weight: 92kg
I usually ride: whatever I'm testing… My best bike is: Kinesis Tripster ATR, Kinesis Aithein
I've been riding for: Over 20 years I ride: Every day I would class myself as: Experienced
I regularly do the following types of riding: road racing, commuting, club rides, sportives, general fitness riding, fixed/singlespeed, mountain biking, Mountain Bike Bog Snorkelling, track



































18 thoughts on “Bergamont E-line Sweep N8 Di2”
Why does it need a dyno hub
Why does it need a dyno hub when there is a 418wh battery on the downtube?
Looks good though. Think we’re definitely going to see more e-bikes out and about.
simondbarnes wrote:Why does
Possibly to comply with German law?
simondbarnes wrote:Why does
It’s necessary so that you don’t lose lights when the battery dies.
My lady is blessed with two
My lady is blessed with two dodgy knees and an electric bike. Hers cost half the price of this one but has allowed her to continue cycling long past the sell-by date of her cartilage. In her words, it has changed her life.
And, purely in the cause of research, you understand, I had a ride on it. It really is great fun and I can see them becoming more and more popular.
eBikes?!? Pah! Get thee
eBikes?!? Pah! Get thee hence!
All good about the motor.
All good about the motor. Super.
But as an urban bike for hauling kids or shopping – IT HAS A KICKSTAND, FFS.
And that front rack – someone was on crack when they thought that was a good idea to fork mount, and at that angle too.
And hydraulic rim brakes? Why do they need to be hydraulic? Because it, its likely riders and their loads weigh lots. Which means a shitload of friction. What are the rims made of?
Oh. Alloy. So it’s either designed not to be ridden much, or not with heavy loads or on hills needing stopping, or not on the shit-and-grit-mired UK ‘road network’.
There’s a reason proper urban bikes have hub brakes, and Bergamont missed it completely.
Also that front mudguard won’t keep your shoes dry/clean.
It’s small things like that plus the larger things like a kickstand instead of a robust Hebie double stand that would make this an initially fun but increasingly disappointing bike to ride.
edit: ARGH: No integrated lock, on a £2,400 bike whose raison d’etre is to be left outside shops/schools/workplaces.
Seems like Shimano don’t have
Seems like Shimano don’t have a disc brake system for the Alfine Di2? Quite an omission, I would say, but adequate for city running. Bergamont have an almost identical Deore bike with discs which would be better for hilly areas.
clayfit wrote:Seems like
Yes they do: http://cycle.shimano-eu.com/publish/content/global_cycle/en/nl/index/components/city___comfort_bike/alfine_di2.html
But I suspect it’s to do with front hub choice as the SP hubs are 6-bolt and the Alfine center-lock. Mind you Shimano do a dynamo Alfine center-lock front hub as I’ve got one 😉
It has a motor. It’s not a
It has a motor. It’s not a bicycle…
Or should we discuss other engines?
Like this one:


Then we should also consider such beauties:
Drop the engine!
To e-bike doubters: you need
To e-bike doubters: you need to try one. I would say that about 30-50% of commuter journeys are now on e-bikes here in Switzerland. There is also an increasing number of Saga-age couples who enjoy riding together on their e-bikes.
You can get 45km/h e-bikes here on the continent. These are loony machines- the acceleration has to be experienced. They are quite dangerous in that cars don’t expect the gent in a suit sitting upright to be going at car speeds, but they are what’s needed for a fast commute.
clayfit wrote:To e-bike
I don’t question motorbikes or e-bikes as such. I state that these engines are NOT bicycles.
I’ve been passed by people on motored bikes when doing the Albula Pass in Switzerland. They barely pressed on the pedals going uphill, stating they were not as young as me……
Definition of a bicycle:
–
–
–
[to be debated]
I don’t need hypocrites telling me that their motor-upgraded contraption is still a bicycle, as sustainable as a bicycle, more ecological than a car (be it only when the weather is fine), forgetting that energy has always its costs even when apparently odorless and magically silent (e.g. Tschernobyl). If it’s way cooler to be a cycling rider, “e-bikers” remain bikers – motor-bikers, they themselves first intended to fight against because these kind of motor bikes (Harley’s etc.) are loud and stinky, thus bad for our future.
PS
How many square meters of solar panels would you have to install to fully charge the battery in half a day after every “e-bike” ride?
PS2
How much energy is used to move the e-bikes’s additional weight (battery, frame, brakes)?
PS3
How far could you ride with the energy needed for producing the e-bike’s battery – not forgetting it’s later recycling?
PS4
Why are we talking about the additional human powered energy instead of the minimum human power energy required? Do you want to ride (instead of “can you ride”) a swiss alpine pass at 6 or 25 km/h?
PS5
When will kids have e-bikes?
marche wrote:are NOT
Why would you care? Your own bike is much worse for the environment than walking, barefoot. Ebikes share many of the immediate societal advantages of bikes, that’s the big thing for me – get other people out of cars, improve my environment. They are reaaaally good fun too.
Of course, I have no kids, so am an eco-god next to you guys with your 2 or 3 + all the eco-rampaging descendents ahead!
marche wrote:
Definition of a
Or perhaps we could not debate it, and instead agree that the word bicycle has a range of meanings and has to be interpreted in context, like almost every other word. Written definitions are things people make up to put in dictionaries, they are not a fundamental part of the language.
bdsl wrote:(…)
Or perhaps we
Ok. Let’s talk without (written) words then 😐
It’s not about meaning, it’s about values: do you love motors? Should we read more about motor specifications on road.cc ?
marche wrote:bdsl
If I had a spare £4k, I’d buy my wife one of these http://www.vivax-assist.com/en/produkte/e-rennrad/vivax-passione.html in a heartbeat, so we could train / do long distances together.
This reviewed bike in particular is a range-extender, a hill-enabler. I own a Workcycles FR8. I cannot ride it up the hill to the station with my son on board – 25kg of bike + 25kg of child plus bags plus me plus three gears = no deal on 10%. I wish it was electric, 250w limited to 25kph would be awesome, and I’d use it for more stuff that currently means a car trip.
A few years back I rode an Urban Arrow e-cargo bike in Amsterdam. There are simply no words.
Those looka bit like Dunlop
Those looka bit like Dunlop Volley shoes. Very cool.
Sorry… I don’t get it…
This
Sorry… I don’t get it…
This is not about cycling anymore. This is about “doing things you can’t do with usual bicycles”.
Am I too slow uphill or is my patience too limited?!
AFK. I’m out.
Some people hire a personal
Some people hire a personal trainer and spend quite a few grand buying a lighter, stiffer, more vertically-compliant bike that can be ridden further, faster.
To most people, they are “doing things you can’t do with usual bicycles”.
Augmenting hillclimbing or range capability by adding a power-assist motor, regulated by output and speed is not of itself evil or worthy of derision.
If you did so in order to stay at the front of a bunch not putting any effort in, sure – that’s going to get a bagging. If you use e-power to help get over an illness or permanent disability, or intrinsic difference in capability (me/my wife wishing to ride at the same pace/place) that’s a totally different discussion, and one that should not attract derision from those considering it beneath them.
Comments are closed.