Himiway Cobra D7 — The BMW X5 of Fat-Tire eBikes

In car terms, the Cobra D7 is a BMW X5. Not a stripped-down commuter hatchback. Not a show truck that never leaves pavement. An X5 — genuinely capable, over-engineered for the terrain, and unfairly comfortable for something that looks this aggressive. The moment you sit on it and drop into a rocky descent with the full suspension absorbing everything, you understand: this bike was not designed for the bike path. It was designed for everything the bike path avoids.

We have tested the Himiway Cobra D7 across Canadian trail systems — rocky single-track, gravel fire roads, muddy trails, paved bike paths, and through a river crossing where the motor and controller were fully submerged. The motor kept running. The controller kept responding. The sealed Bafang hub motor housing and IP-rated wiring held up without a single fault. We have received more compliments on this bike than any other eBike we have tested. Strangers stop to ask about it. Other riders slow down to look. It is that kind of bike.

960 Wh. That is a 48V 20Ah Samsung/LG pack — one of the largest batteries in its class. In summer, that translates to 100–128 km of real range. In Canadian winter at −10°C, you still get 60–90 km depending on PAS level and terrain. The 1000W hub motor delivers 90 Nm of torque through a torque sensor — not a cadence sensor. You push harder, you get more power. You ease off, it eases off. The ride feel is natural, responsive, and engaging. Combined with Shimano 8-speed gearing, Tektro HD-E350 hydraulic brakes with a 203 mm front rotor, and 26×4.5-inch Kenda fat tires on full suspension — this is a purpose-built trail machine that happens to be equally comfortable on the road.

$3,599 CAD with free Canada-wide shipping and a 2-year warranty including battery. Finance from ~$150/month →

Watch Our Reviews

Want the full written deep-dive? Read our river-tested Cobra D7 review (AAAA rated) → — AAAA ratings across power, suspension, build quality, brakes, and aesthetics, real Canadian trail data, the one downfall, and honest opinions on who should (and shouldn’t) buy this bike.

Zeus Trail Report Card — AAAA

After extensive Canadian trail testing across four seasons with a 185 lb tester on rocky single-track, fire roads, mud, pavement, and a full river crossing, here is how the Cobra D7 scores. AAAA is our highest rating.

Category Zeus Grade Notes
Motor Power AAAA 1000W hub motor never ran out of power on any terrain. 90 Nm through torque sensor.
Suspension AAAA Inverted fork + DNM rear shock — absorbed roots, rocks, and drops with composure.
Build Quality AAAA 6061 aluminium frame. No rattles, no creaking, no loose hardware after months of trail use.
Brakes AAAA Tektro HD-E350, 203/180 mm rotors. Confident stopping on steep descents.
Aesthetics AAAA More compliments than any other eBike we have tested. Strangers stop to ask about it.
Battery Range AAAA 960 Wh — 100–128 km summer, 60–90 km winter. One of the largest in its class.
Waterproofing AAAA River-tested — motor and controller submerged. Kept running. Sealed hub motor housing.
Tire Grip AAA 26×4.5 Kenda fat tires grip loose gravel, mud, sand, snow, and wet rock well.
Shimano 8-Speed AAA Reliable shifts, KMC Z8.3 EPT chain. Adequate for trail riding — not SRAM-level precision.
Fender/Rack Compatibility B Four-bar linkage rear makes off-the-shelf racks and fenders incompatible. Universal kits need modification.

Why the Cobra D7 Is the Best-Equipped Fat-Tire eBike Under $4,000

Most fat-tire eBikes under $4,000 force you to choose. Full suspension or big battery. Torque sensor or powerful motor. Hydraulic brakes or fat tires. The Cobra D7 refuses the trade-off. Here is what you get, all in one frame:

  • 1000W hub motor (1,500W peak) with 90 Nm torque — enough power to climb technical grades loaded with gear and a 400 lb total payload. Hub motors are simpler, sealed, and maintenance-free compared to mid-drives — and this one survived a river crossing.
  • Torque sensor — not a cadence sensor. The Cobra D7 reads how hard you push the pedals and responds proportionally. This is rare at this price for a hub motor bike. Most hub-motor fat-tire bikes in this range use cadence sensors with on/off power delivery.
  • 960 Wh Samsung/LG battery — removable, integrated into the downtube, and one of the largest packs on any fat-tire eBike under $4,000. Real-world range: 100–128 km in summer, 60–90 km in Canadian winter.
  • Full suspension with four-bar rear linkage — inverted fork with 120 mm travel up front, adjustable DNM rear shock. The four-bar linkage maintains traction on rough terrain and prevents pedal bob under power — a real engineering advantage over simple single-pivot designs.
  • 26×4.5-inch Kenda fat tires — massive contact patch for grip on loose gravel, sand, snow, and mud. Fat tires also act as natural suspension, adding comfort on rough surfaces.
  • $3,599 CAD — for all of the above, with free shipping, a 2-year warranty, and no hidden required purchases.

Key Features

  • 1000W Brushless Geared Hub Motor (1,500W Peak) — 90 Nm Torque — Sealed, maintenance-free, and river-proven. The geared hub design provides strong low-speed torque for hill climbing and trail obstacles without the drivetrain complexity of a mid-drive. We tested it on sustained rocky climbs with a 185 lb rider — the motor never faltered, never overheated, and never cut out. The sealed housing survived full submersion in a river crossing.
  • Torque Sensor — Proportional Power Delivery — The Cobra D7 measures your actual pedal force, not just whether the cranks are spinning. Push harder on a climb, get more assist. Cruise lightly on a flat, get gentle support. This is a feature typically reserved for mid-drive bikes or premium hub-motor builds — finding it on a $3,599 fat-tire eBike is exceptional.
  • 48V 20Ah Samsung/LG Battery (960 Wh) — Removable — Integrated into the downtube for a clean look and low centre of gravity. Removable for indoor charging or winter storage. 960 Wh is serious capacity — enough for full-day trail rides without range anxiety. Charge time: 7 hours with the included 48V 3A smart charger. Store the battery above 10°C overnight for optimal winter performance.
  • Full Suspension — Inverted Fork (120 mm) + DNM Rear Shock — The inverted fork design (stanchions at the bottom, sliders at the top) is stiffer and more resistant to flex than a conventional fork — the same design philosophy used on motorcycle forks and high-end downhill mountain bikes. The adjustable DNM rear shock uses a four-bar linkage — meaning the rear axle follows a controlled arc through its travel, maintaining traction and reducing pedal bob. On roots, rocks, and trail drops, this suspension system absorbed impacts with composure that impressed us.
  • Tektro HD-E350 Hydraulic Disc Brakes — 203 mm Front / 180 mm Rear — eBike-rated hydraulic brakes with motor cutoff sensors. The 203 mm front rotor provides serious stopping power for an 88 lb bike — essential on steep descents with a heavy payload. One-finger actuation, consistent modulation, and no fade during our extended trail testing.
  • Shimano 8-Speed Drivetrain (11–34T) — 40T narrow-wide chainring with KMC Z8.3 EPT chain (anti-corrosion coated). Eight speeds provide a wide gear range for both steep climbs and fast flat sections. The narrow-wide chainring profile prevents chain drops on rough terrain without needing a chain guide.
  • 26×4.5-Inch Kenda Fat Tires — Massive rubber. The 4.5-inch width provides a contact patch that grips loose gravel, sand, snow, and mud where standard 2.4-inch tires would slip. We tested across loose gravel, wet rock, packed snow, and mud — traction remained reliable across all conditions. The high-volume casing also provides additional suspension comfort beyond the mechanical suspension.
  • 400 lb Maximum Payload — Rider, gear, and cargo combined. Enough for a 250 lb rider with a loaded pack, hunting gear, or panniers full of supplies. The full-suspension design and fat tires maintain comfort and control even at heavy loads.
  • LCD Display with USB Charging — Speed, PAS level, battery percentage, trip data, and odometer. The USB port charges your phone on the trail — a detail that matters on long rides where your phone doubles as a GPS.
  • Front & Rear LED Lights with Brake Function — Battery-powered LEDs integrated into the frame. The rear light brightens when you brake — increasing visibility to vehicles and other trail users. Powered by the main 48V battery, not disposable AAs.

Everything Included — No Hidden Costs

The Cobra D7 ships ready to ride. Your first trail requires zero additional purchases:

  • Himiway Cobra D7 full suspension eBike
  • 48V 20Ah Samsung/LG battery (960 Wh) — integrated, removable
  • 48V 3A smart charger (7-hour full charge)
  • LCD display with USB charging port (pre-installed)
  • Front LED headlight + rear LED taillight with brake function
  • Thumb throttle
  • Heavy-duty aluminium kickstand
  • Pedals
  • Tool kit for final assembly (85% pre-assembled)
  • Owner’s manual

Not included (and worth knowing): Fenders and a rear rack are not included and cannot be easily added due to the four-bar rear linkage. See our honest take below.

The Honest Take — What We’d Change

1. Fenders and racks — the one real downfall. The Cobra D7’s four-bar rear linkage and aggressive frame geometry make it incompatible with most off-the-shelf fender and rack sets. Standard bolt-on fenders designed for hardtail frames will not fit. If you need fenders for commuting in rain, you will need universal fat-tire clip-on fenders with modified mounting hardware. If you need a rear rack for cargo, a seatpost-mounted rack is your best option. This is a genuine trade-off of the full-suspension design — and it is the one thing we would change about this bike.

2. 88 lbs is heavy. There is no way around it. With the battery installed, the Cobra D7 weighs 88 lbs. That is manageable on flat ground and irrelevant once you are riding (the motor does the work). But loading it onto a car rack, carrying it up stairs, or lifting it over obstacles requires effort. If you need a lighter trail bike, a hardtail or a mid-drive with a smaller battery will save 15–25 lbs — but you lose the full suspension and the 960 Wh range.

3. Cadence gearing, not mid-drive gearing. The hub motor does not drive through the gears the way a mid-drive does. Gear selection matters less for motor efficiency and more for your personal pedalling cadence. This is simpler (you shift when your legs want to, not when the motor demands it) but it means the motor does not multiply torque through low gears the way a mid-drive does on very steep technical climbs.

4. No turn signals. At $3,599, we would expect integrated turn signals. They are not included. Aftermarket handlebar-end turn signals are an easy $30–$50 add-on.

Despite these trade-offs, the Cobra D7 delivers where it matters most: power, suspension, range, brakes, build quality, and pure trail presence. The things it does well, it does at a level that bikes costing $5,000+ struggle to match.

Full Specifications

Motor & Performance
Motor 1000W brushless geared hub motor (1,500W peak)
Torque 90 Nm
Sensor Torque sensor
Top Speed 32 km/h (20 mph) default — unlockable to 45 km/h on request
Pedal Assist 5 levels + thumb throttle
Class Class 1/2/3 capable
Battery & Range
Battery 48V 20Ah (960 Wh) — Samsung/LG cells, integrated downtube, removable
Range (Manufacturer) 100–128 km (varies by terrain, rider weight, PAS level)
Range (Winter, −10°C) 60–90 km depending on PAS level and terrain
Charger 48V 3A smart charger — 7-hour full charge
Frame & Dimensions
Frame 6061 aluminium alloy, full suspension, single size
Wheels 26-inch
Tires Kenda 26″ × 4.5″ fat tires
Weight 88 lbs (40 kg) — battery: 8.8 lbs
Max Payload 400 lbs (181 kg)
Rider Height 5’3″ – 6’5″
Seat Height 30.3″ – 37″
Seatpost 30.9 × 350 mm alloy
Stem XF-827 (50 mm extension)
Suspension & Brakes
Front Fork Inverted fork, 120 mm travel
Rear Shock DNM, four-bar linkage
Brakes Tektro HD-E350 hydraulic disc — 203 mm front / 180 mm rear
Drivetrain
Gears Shimano 8-speed (11–34T cassette)
Chainring 40T narrow-wide
Chain KMC Z8.3 EPT (anti-corrosion coated)
Electronics & Display
Display LCD with USB charging port
Headlight 48V LED, battery-powered
Taillight LED with integrated brake light
Throttle Thumb throttle
Shipping & Warranty
Assembly 85% pre-assembled
Shipping Free Canada-wide
Warranty 2 years — including battery

Who Is the Cobra D7 Best For?

  • Trail riders who want full suspension and fat tires without a $5,000+ price tag — The Cobra D7 combines inverted fork + four-bar rear linkage + 4.5-inch Kenda tires + torque sensor + 960 Wh battery at $3,599. Finding all five on one bike under $4,000 is nearly impossible. This is a fully-equipped trail machine at a mid-range price.
  • Hunters and backcountry riders — 400 lb payload handles rider plus gear. Fat tires grip sand, mud, snow, and loose gravel. The sealed hub motor survived a river crossing. 960 Wh provides all-day range. The quiet hub motor does not announce your arrival the way a mid-drive does.
  • Heavy riders (200–300+ lbs) — The 400 lb payload and full suspension maintain comfort and control at loads where most eBikes start to feel overwhelmed. The 203 mm front brake rotor provides proportional stopping power for heavier riders. Read our wattage guide for heavy riders →
  • Canadian winter riders — Fat tires provide natural traction on snow and ice. 960 Wh means you still have 60–90 km of range at −10°C after cold-weather battery loss. Hydraulic brakes perform consistently in freezing temperatures. Store the removable battery indoors overnight for best performance. See our winter eBike guide →
  • Riders who want a hub motor over a mid-drive — If you do not want to think about gear shifting for motor efficiency, the hub motor is simpler. Shift when your legs want to, not when the motor demands it. No exposed mid-drive housing to worry about in mud or water. The sealed hub is essentially maintenance-free. PAS vs throttle explained →
  • Riders 5’3″ to 6’5″ — Broad height range with a 30.3″ to 37″ adjustable seat height.

Who it’s NOT for: Riders who need fenders and a rear rack out of the box (the four-bar linkage makes aftermarket racks and fenders difficult — consider the A7 Pro which includes both). Apartment dwellers who carry bikes up stairs daily (88 lbs is not stair-friendly). Riders who want mid-drive torque multiplication on steep technical climbs (the hub motor is powerful but does not multiply through gears — consider the D7 Pro for a mid-drive alternative). Riders who prioritise lightweight eBikes above all else.

How It Compares to Other Zeus Trail Bikes

Spec Cobra D7 D7 Pro A7 Pro Tesway X7 AWD
Price (CAD) $3,599 $4,999 $2,999 $2,399
Motor 1000W hub 1000W mid-drive 500W mid-drive Dual motor AWD
Torque 90 Nm 160 Nm 130 Nm 200 Nm
Sensor Torque Torque Torque Cadence
Battery 48V 20Ah (960 Wh) 48V 20Ah (960 Wh) 48V 15Ah (720 Wh) 52V 60Ah (3,120 Wh)
Suspension Full (inverted fork + 4-bar) Full (mid-drive) Full (fork + shock) Front only
Tires 26×4.5 fat 26×4.8 fat 27.5×2.4 20×4.0 fat
Brakes Tektro 203/180 mm Tektro 203/180 mm Hydraulic 180 mm 4-piston 203 mm
Weight 88 lbs ~95 lbs 77 lbs 119 lbs
Payload 400 lbs 400 lbs 300 lbs 440 lbs
Frame Mountain Mountain Step-thru Step-over

Choose the Cobra D7 for the best value in a full-suspension fat-tire trail bike with a torque sensor — simpler hub motor, sealed and river-proven, 960 Wh range, $3,599. Choose the D7 Pro if you want mid-drive torque multiplication (160 Nm Bafang M620) for serious technical climbs at $4,999. Choose the A7 Pro if you want a step-thru frame with fenders, rack, and dropper seatpost included for commuting at $2,999. Choose the Tesway X7 AWD if maximum battery capacity (3,120 Wh) and dual-motor AWD matter more than suspension and torque sensor quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the real range of the Cobra D7?

Manufacturer-rated: 100–128 km depending on terrain, rider weight, and PAS level. In Canadian winter at −10°C, expect 60–90 km. The 960 Wh battery is one of the largest in its class — range anxiety is not a realistic concern for most riders on most rides.

Is the Cobra D7 waterproof?

We rode it through a river with water rising to the battery line. The sealed hub motor and controller housing kept water out. The bike continued operating without fault. It is designed for rain, puddles, stream crossings, and Canadian weather. That said, do not submerge the battery contacts or charge port underwater — dry the bike after extreme water exposure.

Can it handle snow and winter riding?

Yes. The 26×4.5-inch fat tires provide natural traction on packed snow and moderate ice. Full suspension absorbs frozen ruts and frost heaves. Battery range drops 20–40% in cold (−10°C to −20°C) — but 960 Wh means you still have significant range. Store the removable battery indoors overnight. Full winter eBike guide →

Can I add fenders and a rear rack?

Not easily. The Cobra D7’s four-bar rear linkage and frame geometry are incompatible with most standard fender and rack sets. Universal fat-tire clip-on fenders and seatpost-mounted racks are options, but may require modified mounting hardware. If fenders and a rack are essential, the A7 Pro includes both out of the box.

Hub motor vs mid-drive — why does the Cobra D7 use a hub motor?

Simplicity and durability. The sealed hub motor has no exposed chain interaction, requires zero drivetrain-related maintenance, and survived a full river crossing. Hub motors are quieter than mid-drives (important for hunting and wildlife trail riding). The trade-off: no torque multiplication through gears on very steep grades. For technical mountain climbing where torque multiplication matters, the D7 Pro uses a Bafang M620 mid-drive.

Is the Cobra D7 good for heavy riders?

Yes. The 400 lb payload is among the highest in its class. Full suspension + fat tires maintain comfort and control at heavy loads. The 203 mm front brake rotor provides proportional stopping power. Riders up to 300 lbs with gear have ridden this bike comfortably. See our wattage guide for heavy riders →

How do I finance this bike?

Multiple options at checkout: Klarna Pay-in-4 (0% interest, 4 biweekly payments — ~$900 per payment), Shop Pay Instalments (0% interest, no credit check), or PayPlan by RBC for monthly payments over 3–60 months. Full financing guide →


Zeus eBikes Canada — Canadian eBike retailer shipping nationwide since 2023. Every Himiway Cobra D7 ships free across Canada with a 2-year warranty including battery.

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