Mavic has unveiled an e-bike motor called the X-Tend. No, we weren’t expecting it either. But it’s something it has been working on behind the scenes for a long time, and the time has come to show it to the world. But not because you’re going to be able to buy a bike with one fitted any time soon. More on that in a bit.
So why an e-bike motor, and why now? Well, Mavic’s recent troubles and subsequent turnaround are well-documented. But if you don't know your recent Mavic history, after parting company with the Amer Sports Group in 2018 the company went into receivership in 2020, only to be saved by investment from a family-led holding firm, the Bourrelier Group. At the time the new owners said, “Mavic must rediscover the dimension of a family SME… and with a refocus on what has made the success of the brand”, and the rebirth of the company has been impressive.
Now operating out of a brand new €10m headquarters and production facility on the outskirts of Annecy, France, the company has scaled down to about a third of its turnover and returned to its innovative roots: earlier this year it presented the new carbon-spoked Cosmic Ultimate wheelset, which we saw being made by hand in the new Annecy facility.
> Mavic launches new Cosmic Ultimate wheelset
The X-Tend project predates the change of ownership – the motor has been in development for five years – and has been enthusiastically backed by the new owners. Mavic of course isn’t a stranger to electronic innovation: back in 1993 it introduced Mavic Zap, the first commercially available electronic derailleur, 16 years before Shimano’s first-generation Di2 hit the shelves. Chris Boardman famously used the Zap components to ride into the yellow jersey in both the 1994 and 1997 Tour de France prologues. Mavic followed Zap with the equally futuristic but less successful Mektronic wireless groupset in 1999.
Mavic X-Tend ebike motor - the details
Anyway, back to the new X-Tend motor. Let’s get some headline stats out of the way. This is a compact and lightweight mid motor system, with a full system weight of 3.2kg. That’s the same as other systems you’ll find out in the wild already, such as the Mahle ebikemotion X20, but there are significant differences here.
Firstly, and most importantly, it’s a mid motor. The X-Tend motor is a fully cylindrical unit that’s just 87mm in diameter and weighs less than 1.2kg. To put that into context, other lightweight mid drives – the Specialized SL1.1, the TQ HPR50, the Bafang M800, the Fazua Ride 60 – all weigh at least half a kilo more than that, and in some cases over a kilo more. It really is very light indeed. The X-Tend has a nominal power of 250W, so it falls within EU pedelec rules. That’s the continuously rated power: Mavic says the system can supply up to 390W in bursts. Similarly, the torque is rated at 39Nm, with up to 50Nm available in ‘boost’ mode.
The Mavic engineers told us that they did think about making the system with a hub motor “for a few moments” but they were pretty sold on a mid motor from the start: it’s better for weight distribution and handling, it makes wheel changes simple (important if you’re in the business of selling aftermarket wheels), and the fact that the motor speed is linked to your cadence and not to your wheel speed means that it can be made more efficient and more powerful at lower speeds, which is good news for climbing.
A major difference between this mid motor and every other mid motor (with the exception of Rocky Mountain’s Powerplay system, but that’s a very different beast) is that it uses a standard crankset. You can fit any Shimano Hollowtech II cranks – double road cranksets, single-ring gravel or MTB units – and it’ll work just fine.
The motor uses an arm that pushes against the crank to apply power. At the moment that’s a metal-on-metal interface but Mavic is developing plastic mounts to prevent any damage to your cranks. The fact that you’re using a standard crank means that the Q-factor – the distance between the external faces of the cranks – is standard too. So the pedal action will be the same as an acoustic bike, and the frame design doesn’t need to be widened to accommodate the motor. At just 87mm in diameter, the X-Tend really isn’t that noticeable in the frame.
Because of the form factor of the motor, Mavic says that it should be much easier for manufacturers to build and adapt frames to fit the system. In essence, you’re just making a bigger bottom bracket shell; in theory, you could use a dummy motor shell for acoustic bikes, as it has standard bearings for a Hollowtech II chainset, and then you just need to make one frame. The cylindrical shape means that the frame can wrap all the way around the motor, unlike other mid motors where the frame needs to be left fully open at the bottom. That means making the BB area stiff is easier for better power transfer and ride quality.
Mavic has been working with BMC, just over the border in Switzerland, to develop the prototype frames we saw; they’re adapted from the BMC Roadmachine with the larger bottom bracket and a modified down tube and top tube to accommodate the battery and the control unit. The only other change is the incorporation of a speed sensor in the chainstay, triggered by a magnet in the disc rotor. The bottom bracket doesn’t fully enclose the motor; you can see that there are cutaways underneath that expose fins on the motor body to help with heat dissipation.
Our Dura-Ace-equipped bikes tipped the scales at just under 10kg, and Mavic also had a flat-bar build of the same frame with Shimano's Metrea transmission that came in under 12kg.
The brushless motor sits centrally in the drive unit and spins at up to 4500rpm. To translate this quick spin into something resembling your cadence, Mavic uses a cycloidal reducer. Two 45-tooth sprockets roll around a track milled into the inside of the slightly bigger drive unit shell, which has one extra tooth hole, with the result being that for each rotation of the motor the drive arm moves forward 1 tooth, giving a 45:1 reduction in rotation speed. The two sprockets are diametrically opposed inside the hub so that there are two opposite points of contact: this helps with power transfer and also prevents any possible movement of the axle when the motor’s in use.
There’s more going on inside the motor, too. At one end there’s a mechanical clutch system that can completely disengage the motor from the cranks. It works in a similar way to a freehub in that there are two pawls engaging with a ratchet, but instead of a spring keeping them in contact there’s a ring that can engage or disengage them.
That means that if you have the motor turned off, or you get your speed up to beyond the assistance limit, the motor is no longer physically attached to the cranks, and the only friction in the system is from a pair of standard bottom bracket bearings, the same as in a non-powered bike. That’s a big benefit over a motor system that stays coupled, which can introduce fairly significant drag if you’re not using it. In order to get a smoother transition from powered to non-powered, the motor ramps down the power over the assistance limit and only disengages the clutch when the power drops to zero.
The battery wasn’t a part of the system that Mavic dwelled on too much, save to say that its extensive experience of aluminium extrusion means it has created a super-light enclosure for the cells. But what is significant is the size of the battery: in the X-Tend system you’re getting a 360Wh battery as standard, which is significantly larger than similarly light systems. The ebikemotion X20, for example, weighs the same but the motor is 70% the capacity, at 250Wh.
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That means longer range, and Mavic’s claim is that this motor system is good for 3,000m of vertical ascent on one charge of the battery. There are a lot of factors that will affect that – I’m not going to get that 3,000m weighing in at the better part of 100kg, for example – but assuming the motor is as efficient as comparably light systems you’ll go further just because the battery holds more juice. On top of the main battery, a 180Wh range extender will also be available, giving up to 540Wh of total capacity for even longer rides.
Control of the system on the bike is mainly through a top-tube control that you’ll find familiar if you’ve used something like an ebikemotion system or Specialized’s SL1.1 motor. There are two buttons to go up and down the assistance modes, a set of LEDs for battery status and another set to tell you what mode you’re in. A handlebar remote button for MTBs and flat-barred bikes is also in development.
As well as the on-bike control, Mavic is developing a smartphone (and Connect IQ) app that will enhance the functionality of the system. For one thing you’ll be able to custom set your modes: how much assistance you’ll get, what the cutoff speed for assistance is, and even how aggressively the motor responds and how the motor ramps down assistance before cutting out.
The three modes are factory-set at 30%, 60% and 120% of rider input, with 150% the maximum. In order to measure that rider input, Mavic has incorporated not just a torque sensor but a fully calibrated power meter, accurate to +/- 2%. The app can show you your total power, and how much of that is coming from the rider and the motor, in real time. The X-Tend also collects this data every second, and stores it on the PCB in the motor. When you sync your smartphone or GPS, the data is uploaded to the cloud. You’ll be able to access some of it, and diagnostic info can be shared with dealers or Mavic in order to diagnose and fix problems.
Riding the Mavic X-Tend ebike motor
We were lucky enough to be invited out to Annecy to be some of the first people outside of Mavic to experience the new motor. It wasn’t a long ride, just a 25km loop to get a feel for the system, with a couple of decent climbs to put the motor through its paces.
First things first: it’s a likeable system. In a bike that weighs just 10kg, it’s not really a noticeable extra weight except when you’re physically picking the bike up, and the clutch system works really well: when the motor’s off the cranks aren’t driving anything other than the rear wheel. That’s a noticeable advantage over, say, the Fazua system where you can drop the battery out to save weight, but the gearbox stays in place, and you can definitely feel it when you’re pedalling. When it wasn’t assisting me my X-Tend-powered BMC felt exactly like an acoustic bike, albeit a heavier one than the top-end spec would suggest. That being said, it’s only just over a kilo heavier than my 105-equipped carbon race bike.
Power application, for the most part, is good. There’s plenty of power there: It feels a bit more powerful than an ebikemotion hub, even though nominally the torque is about the same, and similar to the SL1.1 motor that Specialized uses in its e-road bikes. The fact that you can keep your cadence high and spin up climbs with the motor still working in its most efficient range is certainly partly the reason for that. That being said, the X-Tend still isn’t great when you’re working at a low cadence – for example, if you’ve been caught at the bottom of a climb in too high a gear. The Mavic engineers are working on the low-speed response.
The way the motor cuts out above the assistance limit is a highlight. There’s no noticeable jump from riding under power to riding acoustically, just a gradual easing off of power. The only real tell above 25kmh is the motor noise stopping: if the motor was silent I doubt you’d feel the point where the assistance stops. While we’re on the subject of the motor noise, that’s a minus point for the system right now. It’s not that it’s especially noisy, it’s more the nature of sound it makes that’s the issue. You get the whirr of the motor but there are also sounds that are probably associated with the reduction gearing that are currently a bit grating. Again, it’s something that’s been flagged up as an issue during development.
There are other smaller issues still to be ironed out too. The built-in power meter is currently better at reporting power in the small ring than the big ring, so there are some tweaks to the algorithm needed to get that right; Mavic has of course made life much harder for itself there by allowing a wide range of cranks to be fitted, so that’s another variable to throw into the mix.
There’s an issue with the motor not cutting out quickly enough too, if you stop pedalling quickly, resulting in a bit of a kick from the pedals. This needs addressing, as the times when you stop pedalling suddenly are generally times you don’t want the motor to continue pushing you forward. So it’s not quite the finished article just yet, but Mavic has run up over 120,000km of testing through any number of prototypes to get to this point, and it shows: this is a motor that behaves a lot like a production unit should. Mavic’s stated aim was to make the X-Tend the most natural-feeling motor there is, and it’s definitely getting there.
Why are Mavic showing us the X-Tend motor now?
So we went out to Annecy and had a fun time trying out the e-bikes, and it’s great to be able to tell you all about it here. But if you’re thinking that the X-Tend sounds like the very thing for you, and you’re looking for a link to click to get on the waiting list, the bad news is that there’s no release date for it. Not even a vague one really, just a suggestion that 2025 or 2026 is possible should the stars align. It sounds like Mavic is going to need other people to come in and partner with them to make the X-Tend happen: bike brands to commit to using the motor, and a bit of financial input to make full production a reality.
“We had a lot of discussion internally,” Mavic told us. “We finally decided to launch it because we need a partner to go to the commercialisation phase. We have a working product that you can ride. It could be sold if the production cost was reasonable.”
Right now, with the motors being made one by one by hand in France, that’s certainly not the case. But with the right investment for mass production, the motor could be competitive with the likes of Fazua and TQ at the higher end of the lightweight bike market, and Mavic are still intent on producing the X-Tend in Europe, the same as with everything that they currently make. The launch is about getting the word out there. “We need some noise,” Mavic said.
So consider this noise, if you’re looking to throw a whole bunch of money at bringing a new motor system to market. The X-Tend certainly has some unique selling points: the overall system weight and the ability to fit any Hollowtech II crank are the big draws here, and it’s a motor that has the potential to be a key part of some really light bikes across a wide range of disciplines. We’re certainly hoping to see it come to fruition.
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71 comments
i mean you can choose that as your hill to die on if you like. i'll watch you in my wing mirrors as the world moves on
Your what mirrors?
Yeah right, talking of the world moving on
Why is saying something is stupid automatically 'a hill to die on'?
'Accoustic' is a stupid term. I won't lose any sleep over it, but I'll voice that opinion when I feel like it.
You can choose people saying 'hill to die on' as your hill to die on, if you like. pretty meta.
mostly i wanted to do the wing mirrors gag
Nice review Dave, thank you.
Just to point out that the Mahle X20 system also has a 350Wh battery as an option, e.g. Orbea Gain Carbon.
Loving all this development of ebikes - though I think a 4500rpm lightweight motor vibrating in a carbon frame will never be the quietest design...
logged in just to like this
Yeah, but much like "analogue bike", it's a pretty obvious gas light to try obscufate that it's a review of a moped
Nowt wrong with motorisied two wheel transport though.
Ok, if you used those terms as an ironic troll, referencing other old analogues, to gaslight (1944...) people like me, then... Chapeau.
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