I know this is a bit outdated with the new Kickr released... But if you are wondering, ERG mode is pretty solid with this trainer. I came from an Elite trainer and ERG was a nightmare. Much smoother if you happen to stop pedaling or go from 140 watts to 400+ watt sprint intervals.
I love the long term reviews! That is one hell of a clean cassette buddy. My Kickr Core has held up well over the years but my Chevron stickers have fallen off. I'll be asking @Shane Miller - GPLama to redesign those. > 👌
Just got one of these used and I noticed that there is a squeak produced somewhere within the cassette area. After noticing it, I took apart everything, checked the freehub, cleaned the cassette, but I still hear it. I just came from a 2016 model, and I worry it is coming from the new insert they use to fit my quick release (the QR skewer fits snugly) moving around within the internals. I guess a bit more grease is in order. :)
I had to return mine after 2 years and they replaced. The trainer would connect but would not transmit power or cadence. I found out the his is a known issue caused by a short on the circuit board. No sure how frequently it happens but at least I got a replacement probably a refurbished one.
I'm here because my 18 year old computrainer will no longer synch with Zwift. I've heard Wahoo approached computrainer and asked to help them make the trainer bluetooth compatible...Computrainer said no thanks....Wahoo makes their own trainer = Computrainer out of business. I love my Computrainer but they flat out refused to embrace the future. A Wahoo Kicker looks like a great replacement for my Computrainer.
Thanks @DesFit for that honest review. What would you choose now after so many months of using and both reviews? Direto XR-T because of a price/features ratio or Wahoo V5 with better price after V6 debut on the market? Thanks!
From what I have read the Elite trainers can cause chipping with Carbon frames due to rigid mounting. So if you have a carbon frame the choice should be easy.
That direct connect just looks to me like a POE feed into the bike. I'd be curious to see if anyone has tried to hook it up with a vanilla POE and RJ45 cable (the fears of accidentally stumbling over the cable notwithstanding).
I can’t imagine what else the could do for the 6 since the 5 offers so much already but you never know what they have in store. The nice thing is, the 5 has been on sale for a considerable amount off recently for spring/summer sales.
Different points of measurement, and I imagine Wahoo is using some sort of algorithm to estimate power at the pedal that isn’t 100% accurate all the time?
If your power output is in the 100 watt range then that's certainly an issue being 10-15 watts low. If it's in the 200-250 watt range that could just be due to the difference in points of measurement. What kind of pedals?
So the question now becomes: how can they improve on those? I imagine they are not just going to fire all the hardware development people and replace them by software people to focus on wahoo X.
Road surface simulation would be something that comes to mind. Wahoo has established itself as one of the leaders for indoor cycling hardware - I only see the software side of things being a compliment to their hardware.
Hello I found the wahoo kickr at a very good price except that I know the 2016 kickr power version is there a big difference with the last kickr? thank you
I don't think that's really going to happen unless they start to give cassette options when ordering since the majority of people still use 11 speed or lower.
Tacx. Forgot to mention that the KICKR doesn’t come with a front wheel block. Not needed but nice to have if you don’t want your front wheel flopping around.