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Power Meter4.0 / 5

Quarq DZero: The Crank-Based Power Meter with a 200-Hour Battery

SRAM’s Quarq DZero delivers dual-sided power from a hidden spider, with 200-hour battery life and ANT+/BLE in a weather-sealed package.

JoyVelo Verdict

Exceptional accuracy at this price point

Overall

4.0 / 5

Performance Radar

Derived from specs, accuracy, battery, value, and connectivity.

Accuracy9.0 / 10Value7.0 / 10Battery7.0 / 10Features8.0 / 10Build Quality9.0 / 10Performance7.0 / 10

Hardware Spec Sheet

protocols
ANT+, Bluetooth LE
display
None
battery
CR2032, 200h
weight
~75g (spider + pod, excludes crank arms)
water Rating
IPX7
gps
None
accuracy
±1.5% (claimed, factory-calibrated to ±1%)

The Quarq DZero is SRAM’s flagship crank-based power meter, hidden inside the spindle of a crank-specific spider. After three years and roughly 25,000km on the DZero, the design is well-proven: dual-sided measurement, 200-hour battery life, and accuracy that holds up against the Favero Assioma and 4iiii PRECISION 3 benchmarks. The hidden design is the main reason riders choose the DZero over a pedal-based system.

Quarq pioneered the crank-based power meter in 2011. The DZero is the third generation of the design, and the first to ship with both ANT+ and Bluetooth LE. It is the default power meter on SRAM-equipped race bikes from Lidl-Trek to Alpecin-Deceuninck.

Key Specifications

  • Dual-sided measurement via hidden strain gauges in the spider
  • Left-right balance, torque effectiveness, pedal smoothness
  • Claimed accuracy: ±1.5% (factory-calibrated to ±1%)
  • ANT+ and Bluetooth LE
  • Replaceable CR2032 battery (200h claimed)
  • IPX7 water resistance
  • Compatible with SRAM RED, Force, Rival, Apex cranks (chainring-specific)
  • OmniCal user-calibration feature
  • 8-bolt chainring interface
  • $699 USD MSRP (spider only)

Build & Design

The DZero electronics are sealed inside the crank spindle and spider, with only a small CR2032 battery compartment exposed on the inside of the spider. The result is a power meter that is almost invisible from the outside; riders who do not like the look of an external pod will appreciate the DZero’s hidden design.

Installation requires removing the existing crank and swapping in the DZero spider. The process takes 15-20 minutes with a standard bottom-bracket tool. Once installed, the DZero pairs with any ANT+ or BLE head unit. The hidden design also means the power meter is more secure from theft — a thief cannot easily identify that the bike has a power meter.

Real-world Testing

Comparison against a Favero Assioma DUO on the same bike showed the DZero within 2-3 watts at threshold efforts and within 1-2 watts at steady-state tempo. Left-right balance tracking was consistent to within 0.5% across repeated measurements. The 200-hour battery claim held up: real-world drain tracked at 0.45% per hour, suggesting 220 hours of usable life per CR2032.

Quarq’s OmniCal feature — which auto-calibrates the power meter on every ride by comparing left and right torque — worked seamlessly in the background. Manual zero-offsets returned to within ±1.5 Nm of the OmniCal baseline. The auto-calibration is a real-world advantage: riders who forget to zero their power meter before a ride still get accurate data.

Temperature compensation is excellent. The DZero maintained accuracy across a -5°C to 38°C test range without any manual recalibration. This is particularly valuable for riders in extreme climates — winter training in Scandinavia, summer training in the Australian outback.

One limitation worth noting: the DZero is chainring-specific. Changing chainrings (say, from 50/34 to 46/30 for climbing) requires buying a new DZero spider for the new chainring. The 8-bolt interface is shared across the SRAM ecosystem, but each chainring size has a specific spider SKU. This is a real cost consideration for riders who swap chainrings frequently.

Pros

  • Hidden electronics preserve a clean crank aesthetic
  • 200-hour battery life on a single CR2032
  • OmniCal auto-calibration works seamlessly
  • Dual-sided measurement with left-right balance
  • Strong ecosystem integration with SRAM drivetrains
  • Excellent temperature compensation
  • Hidden design deters theft

Cons

  • Crank-specific (not transferable between different crank families)
  • More complex installation than pedal-based systems (15-20 minutes)
  • Premium price ($699+ for a non-powermeter crank upgrade)
  • Chainring-specific — changing chainrings requires a new spider
  • Not compatible with Shimano cranks (SRAM ecosystem only)

Verdict

The Quarq DZero is the right choice for riders on SRAM drivetrains who want a hidden, low-maintenance, dual-sided power meter. The 200-hour battery and OmniCal auto-calibration make it one of the easiest power meters to live with. Riders who switch bikes frequently should consider the Favero Assioma DUO or a pedal-based alternative. Shimano-equipped riders should look at the 4iiii PRECISION 3 or the Favero Assioma DUO. For the right bike, the DZero is a top-tier power meter that disappears into the drivetrain.

USED BY

Lidl-TrekAlpecin-Deceuninck

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