formula400 wrote: Sun Feb 08, 2026 8:58 am
mboy wrote: Sat Feb 07, 2026 10:39 pm
"Dark side" means Road Bikes...
Getting eMTB is arguably seeing the light!

M
Not sure I ageee with you there
Love my road bike



OK o for the 25yrs or so I've been posting on MTB related forums, "Dark Side" has always meant Road Bikes... When an MTBer talks about "going over to the dark side" it means that they are getting a road bike... That's just accepted MTB forum parlance for well over 2 decades now. Buying an eMTB?
formula400 wrote: Sun Feb 08, 2026 7:14 am
Right, frame is 5 years, motor 2 years,
Budget wise £7600
But need to be cycle scheme and need to be bought asap
All the reviews I’ve read have been positive,
Also my riding buddy has a trek rail and he was the one who pointed me there.
Riding will be the odd peaslake, odd swinley and then a few flat rides where I live.
Amount of use, not loads until the little man starts going longer distances
Ok so all of my advice comes from the point of view of someone who's spent 2 decades in the cycle industry, owned my own shop, worked for big brands, dealt with consumers and customers at all levels and sold bikes of all shapes and sizes... What's more, I am still a keen rider... So...
When you say "needs to be bought ASAP"...? Do you have time to test ride bikes first? It sounds like to me you're not sure of what you need (have ideas of what you'd like though), and are about to spend a huge chunk of wedge before having done more thorough research...?
How so...? Well for "flat rides where I live", an eMTB is about the worst way to spend a load of cash! I have seen it countless times, people go and spend a huge chunk on a full fat eMTB for riding flat local trails, then complain that it's heavy, slower than their previous unassisted MTB, and it was a pointless waste of cash... And they're right! A 25kg bike with a draggy motor and a speed assist limit of 15.5mph will be rubbish on flat trails compared to a nice XC/Downcountry or even a decent shorter travel trail bike... Where full fat eMTB's come into their own, is on bigger, steeper terrain... The basic rule of thumb is, the steeper the terrain, the more an eMTB makes sense...
Of course, you don't have to go full fat... Lighter weight eBikes with more efficient motors and smaller batteries feel a lot closer to a regular MTB when over the 15.5mph assist limit, and they still give a reasonable assist up to that limit...
@weeksy is vocal about his preference for them... I like them myself (I like all bikes though), and I own both full fat eMTB and a lighter weight eMTB too, and for flatter terrain, would always take the lighter bike out of preference... It's just faster and more like a regular bike on flowing trails, the full fat bike only makes more sense on steeper terrain.
So... The AmFlow by now you're thinking must make more sense...? It's lighter AND has the full fat motor... Well here's the issue... That Avinox motor has a LOT more drag above when it's not assisting than any other motor system. It takes around 30W just to turn it when it's not switched on I am told! This is mostly why it has about 10% worse range for a given battery size compared to other systems... But it's the torquiest and most powerful system out there, which is the massive appeal... Just don't buy it thinking cos it's light, it'll be fun to ride on flatter trails...
formula400 wrote: Sun Feb 08, 2026 7:47 am
What’s considered the best bike at that price point?
"Best" is highly subjective... For many people it will be the AmFlow PL Carbon Pro on offer right now... For someone who's just sessioning DH runs, then something with longer travel and beefier components would make a lot more sense... For someone just riding their local flattish trails, then a sub 20kg "SL" eBike with much less assistance and less drag would make more sense... It's not a one size fits all thing you see! It's actually very hard to answer without asking lots and lots of questions... If you want to chat in more detail, I drop me a PM, happy to help so you don't end up with an expensive bike that isn't suitable for purpose...