Bike test: Islabikes eJimi

Islabikes’ eJimi is a lightweight e-mountain bike aimed at older or less able riders
Extra power to your pedals without much extra weight. Cycle magazine editor Dan Joyce reviews a new electric MTB from Islabikes

The e-bike dilemma: if you need electric assistance, you’re not best served by a heavy bike that’s harder to manoeuvre and pick up. Islabikes addresses this by using the lightweight ebikemotion system for its e-Icons range. Ready to ride, the eJimi weighs 14.5kg.

It’s aimed at older or less able cyclists, like the unpowered Icons. It has a step-through frame, low gears, twist-grip shifting, short-reach brake levers, and easy-tyre-change rims. Like the Islabikes Jimi, the e-version is at its best on trail centre blue or green routes and non-technical bridleways.

On more difficult trails I found the handling unforgiving. It’s a rigid bike with a fairly steep head angle. Additionally, the 40Nm motor laboured on the steepest (20-25%) climbs.

While a higher torque motor would climb better, you’d only find one on a much heavier e-bike. Given the riding expectations of most eJimi owners, the trade off for lower weight is worth it. The ebikemotion motor still plays a role on tough hills, and less precipitous terrain is a breeze.

The 250Wh battery is concealed in the down tube, where its weight is well balanced. There are anti-tamper bolts to prevent you removing it. That means you must park the eJimi near a power socket to recharge. Mileage will vary by usage but I’d expect 30-40 miles mountain biking – and it can easily be ridden unassisted.

There are three levels of riding assistance, plus a ‘walk’ mode, selected via an iWoc Trio handlebar controller. This shows the same colours (green, amber, red) in the same place for the power modes and the approximate charge remaining, which is a little confusing. It’s also hard to discern in direct sunlight.

There’s no handlebar display so if you want information like speed, distance or exact charge remaining, you must install the ebikemotion app on your phone. This app isn’t flawless but is very useful for fault diagnosis as it sends information to Islabikes. (It helped isolate a problem I had with the rear wheel sensor.)

Verdict

The eJimi adds discreet, lightweight electric assistance to a bike already well designed for older or less able riders. The iWoc control could be better; everything else is spot on.

Other options

Ribble Hybrid AL e from £2,199

Good value e-hybrid with the same ebikemotion setup, SRAM NX Urban 1×11 gearing, and 35-622 Marathons. 13.1kg

Kinesis Rise Hardtail E-MTB £3,650

Hardtail with the Fazua Evation system, an X-Fusion E-Slide 34 fork, and 1×11 SLX. 19.65kg.

First published in Cycle magazine, December 2020/January 2021 issue. All information correct at time of publishing.

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At Cycling UK and Cycle magazine, we are proudly independent. There’s no pressure to please advertisers as we’re funded by our members. Our product reviews aren’t press releases; they’re written by experienced cyclists after thorough testing.

Tech spec

Islabikes eJimi

Price: £2,699.99

Sizes: S, M (tested), L

Weight: 14.53kg (32lb) inc pedals

Frame & fork: 6061 aluminium frame, fittings for rack, mudguard, external dropper post, internal battery. Carbon fork with tapered steerer, 12×100mm thru axle, fittings for mudguard and two luggage/bottle cages

Wheels: 57-622 Schwalbe Rocket Ron tyres, Islabikes ETC rims, 32×3 ss spokes, Islabikes disc front hub, Mahle ebikemotion X35 rear hub

Transmission: no pedals, 170mm Islabikes low Q-factor direct mount cranks, 30t narrow/wide chainring, KMC X10 chain, Sunrace 10-speed 11-40t cassette. SRAM 10-speed Gripshift shifter, SRAM GX rear derailleur. 10 ratios, 22-79in

Electronics: Mahle ebikemotion X35 250W hub motor, 250Wh Panasonic battery, iWoc Trio handlebar control

Braking: SRAM DB Level TL close-reach levers & hydraulic callipers, 160mm rotors