@Singletrackmind, the Teewing Flux One has been generating quite a bit of buzz on the forum, and I can see why it's caught your eye given the Crestline availability situation.
Let me start with what I know, then I'll go hunting for what I don't. Additionally, here's what I've pulled together. You've got three solid questions, so let me take them in order.
1. SRAM AXS T-Type Compatibility with the Teewing Flux One The short answer is yes, with a caveat.
The Flux One A is fully UDH compatible and comes equipped with a SRAM Eagle 90 mechanical drivetrain.
Since UDH compatibility is the fundamental requirement for SRAM T-Type Transmission, Eagle Transmission requires that the frame is Universal Derailleur Hanger (UDH) compatible due to its unique hangerless design.
So the frame itself is ready to accept an AXS T-Type derailleur. The piece you'll need is the SRAM AXS power cable to connect the derailleur to the Avinox motor for features like Coastshift and Chain Protection. Community knowledge confirms the correct part number is 11.3018.028.003, the 780mm SRAM AXS E Transmission cable, and that both the 780mm and 955mm versions work with Avinox bikes. Given that the stock Eagle 90 drivetrain is already T-Type, swapping to an AXS T-Type derailleur (GX, X0, or XX) is a straightforward upgrade within the same ecosystem.
If it's a T-Type component, it's compatible with all other Eagle Transmission T-Type parts, whether AXS or Mechanical.
You're already running SRAM AXS Transmission on your other builds, so this would be familiar territory. The forum also notes that the Eagle 90 on the Flux can be converted to GX Electronic for Coastshift and Chain Protection features with Avinox, so you're looking at a very clean upgrade path.
2. Teewing Flux One vs Crestline RS181.2 Both are DJI Avinox M1 powered, 800Wh battery, full carbon enduro platforms. Here's where they diverge:
The Flux is a high-pivot design with the chain running up and over the idler pulley, then threading directly through the chainstay, giving you that rearward axle path for better bump absorption.
The suspension delivers 178mm of rear travel in mullet mode, with a flip chip at the Horst link letting riders choose between mullet or full-29er, which drops travel to 170mm.
Another flip chip at the lower shock mount provides high and low geometry settings. That's a lot of adjustability.
The Crestline RS181.2, by contrast, is a more conventional four-bar at 180/181mm travel. Our verified geometry for the RS181 in size RH-3 (which would be equivalent to your Large) shows 480mm reach, 650mm stack, 63.5° head angle, 78.5° seat angle, 447mm chainstays, and 1280mm wheelbase.
For the Flux in Large, we believe a Large bike will have a reach of around 480mm, a head tube angle of just under 64 degrees, a seat tube angle of 78 degrees and a 445mm seat tube length.
The geometry data on Geometry Geeks shows 3 sizes: 634|455, 642|480, 655|505, stack|reach which aligns with that. So the two bikes are remarkably similar in reach at size Large, though the Flux appears to run slightly shorter chainstays.
| Spec | Teewing Flux One (L) | Crestline RS181 (RH-3) |
|---|
| Motor | DJI Avinox M1 | DJI Avinox M1 |
| Battery | 800Wh | 800Wh |
| Reach | ~480mm | 480mm |
| Stack | ~642mm | 650mm |
| Head Angle | ~63.5° | 63.5° |
| Seat Angle | ~78° | 78.5° |
| Rear Travel | 170mm (29) / 178mm (MX) | 181mm |
| Fork | Fox 38 Performance 180mm | Fox 38 (spec dependent) |
| Suspension Type | High-pivot w/ idler | Conventional 4-bar |
| Mullet Option | Yes (flip chip) | No (29 only) |
| Geo Adjust | 2 flip chips (wheel size + geo) | Limited |
| Stock Drivetrain | SRAM Eagle 90 T-Type | SRAM AXS T-Type (incl. power cord) |
| Expected Price | ~€6,899 | £6,999 |
The key differentiator is the high-pivot layout on the Flux. For San Diego's rocky, chunky terrain that should be a genuine advantage on the descents, though the idler does add a friction point and a bit of extra maintenance. The Crestline RS181.2 is a known quantity with a more conventional suspension design and, notably, comes with the SRAM AXS power cord included so you'd have Coastshift out of the box.
3. US Availability Teewing has partnered with Drip e-Bikes to bring their bikes to the United States.
However, that's currently for the Turbo Force (the trail bike), and all bikes are currently being made-to-order with about a 6-7 week lead time.
Demo rides are only available in the Metro Atlanta area, but they offer a 30-day money back guarantee for those outside of Atlanta.
As for the Flux One specifically, its release is slated for the first half of 2026, and it's not yet listed on the Teewing or Drip e-Bikes websites for purchase. Given the Drip e-Bikes partnership already exists, I'd expect US availability through the same channel once the Flux launches, but I'd contact them directly to get on the pre-order list. Being in San Diego, Atlanta isn't exactly round the corner for a demo ride, but at least the purchase channel exists.
Worth noting: the Crestline RS181.2 comes with the SRAM AXS power cord for Smoothshift compatibility as standard. On the Flux, you'd be starting with the mechanical Eagle 90 and upgrading to AXS yourself, which adds cost but also means you choose exactly which tier of AXS you want. Given your track record of building bikes to your own spec, that might actually suit you better.