That's a smart move. The Detroit is the spiritual reference, but the Omera needs its own visual identity. A seat tube cutout is a strong signature — instantly recognizable and signals "this is a track-bred frame" without copying Dosnoventa's exact look.
| Feature | Detroit | Omera |
|---|---|---|
| Seat tube | Standard round | Cutout wrapping rear wheel ✅ |
| Down tube | Columbus Airplane ovalized | 50mm round (battery inside) |
| Drive | Chain | Gates CDX belt (visible difference) |
| Brakes | None (track) or rim | Hydraulic disc |
| Rear dropout | 120mm track | 135mm horizontal/sliding |
| Motor | None | Bafang G020 (stealth hub) |
The cutout + belt drive + disc brakes together give the Omera a completely different silhouette from the Detroit while keeping the same aggressive 74°/76° pursuit geometry. Someone who knows bikes would clock it immediately as its own thing. ppl-ai-file-upload.s3.amazonaws
One thing to flag for the frame builder — the Omera has 135mm rear spacing (not 120mm track), so the seat tube cutout needs to be wider than a typical track frame cutout. The wheel sits in the same plane but the hub flanges and disc rotor are wider. Make sure the cutout clears:
- Tire (700×25c) + 3mm each side minimum
- Disc rotor on the non-drive side
- Belt on the drive side
This is doable but the frame builder needs to know upfront. Want me to add this to the frame fabrication brief?
A torque sensor is fundamentally different from cadence — it measures how hard you push, not just whether you're pedaling.
The Physics
A strain gauge is bonded to the bottom bracket axle or crankshaft. When you push down on the pedal, the metal axle deforms by a microscopic amount (invisible to the eye). The strain gauge detects this deformation as a change in electrical resistance — harder push = more deformation = stronger signal.adventuro+1
It's analog and proportional — not on/off like your cadence sensor. The motor literally amplifies your legs in real-time.kerenelectric+1
Types
About €54 more for a dramatically better ride feel. Worth it on a stealth build where the whole point is "you can't tell it's electric."
The Physics
A strain gauge is bonded to the bottom bracket axle or crankshaft. When you push down on the pedal, the metal axle deforms by a microscopic amount (invisible to the eye). The strain gauge detects this deformation as a change in electrical resistance — harder push = more deformation = stronger signal. adventuro
It's analog and proportional — not on/off like your cadence sensor. The motor literally amplifies your legs in real-time. velotricbike
Types
For Omera: BB Torque Sensor
The only option that works with your Bafang G020 hub motor is a bottom bracket torque sensor. It replaces your BSA 68mm BB with one that has strain gauges built in. support.favoritebikes
Bikone BSA Torque Sensor
This is the most interesting option — purpose-built for DIY e-bikes: [bikone](https://www.bikone.com/bottombracket-torque-sensors/)
KT Controller Compatibility
Good news — KT controllers (your T06S) do support torque sensor input. A user on Endless Sphere confirmed KT controllers have torque settings and some support both PAS and torque. endless-sphere
The Ride Feel Difference
This is the real reason to care: victripebike-eu
A torque sensor makes the e-bike feel invisible — people can't tell you have a motor. With cadence, the on/off behavior gives it away. For a stealth fixie build like Omera, torque sensing is the philosophically correct choice.
Cost Impact
About €54 more for a dramatically better ride feel. Worth it on a stealth build where the whole point is "you can't tell it's electric."