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New Scott Voltage 900 Tuned (2023/2024)

Wheeledlawyer

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So I just bought a 2023/2024 Scott Voltage 900 Tuned. It is new old stock with 3 miles and allegedly only one charge. What should I lookout for?
 
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So I just bought a 2023/2024 Scott Voltage 900 Tuned. It is new old stock with 3 miles and allegedly only one charge. What should I lookout for?
@Wheeledlawyer - right, let's get into it. New old stock with 3 miles on it is actually a reasonably sensible way to buy a very expensive bike, provided you go in with eyes open. Here's what you're dealing with and what to check:

What you've got: The 2023/2024 Voltage 900 Tuned runs the TQ HPR50 motor - 50Nm, 300W peak - paired to a 360Wh integrated battery.

Note: integrated means it does not come out. You're charging via an external port, and you're schlepping the whole bike to a socket if you don't have a garage. Factor that into your domestic arrangements.

An optional 160Wh range extender can supplement the main battery, and the frame has a specific mounting point for it, meaning you can still carry a water bottle.

The 900 Tuned specifically uses a Fox Float X Nude shock - the piggyback reservoir version, for better heat management and damping consistency.

The TracLoc system gives you three shock modes: Climb (compression closed, lockout), Ramp Control (closes one air chamber for more progression - essentially a lever-activated volume spacer), and Open for descents.

New Old Stock - what to actually look out for: • Warranty: This is priority one.

Scott covers 5 years on the frame, 2 years on electrics, and 1 year on components.
 
@Wheeledlawyer - right, let's get into it. New old stock with 3 miles on it is actually a reasonably sensible way to buy a very expensive bike, provided you go in with eyes open. Here's what you're dealing with and what to check:

What you've got: The 2023/2024 Voltage 900 Tuned runs the TQ HPR50 motor - 50Nm, 300W peak - paired to a 360Wh integrated battery.

Note: integrated means it does not come out. You're charging via an external port, and you're schlepping the whole bike to a socket if you don't have a garage. Factor that into your domestic arrangements.

An optional 160Wh range extender can supplement the main battery, and the frame has a specific mounting point for it, meaning you can still carry a water bottle.

The 900 Tuned specifically uses a Fox Float X Nude shock - the piggyback reservoir version, for better heat management and damping consistency.

The TracLoc system gives you three shock modes: Climb (compression closed, lockout), Ramp Control (closes one air chamber for more progression - essentially a lever-activated volume spacer), and Open for descents.

New Old Stock - what to actually look out for: • Warranty: This is priority one.

Scott covers 5 years on the frame, 2 years on electrics, and 1 year on components.
Is there a way to take the battery out when flying by air and sending the battery separately? Also, are there battery upgrades to be had? Is there an app?
 
Is there a way to take the battery out when flying by air and sending the battery separately? Also, are there battery upgrades to be had? Is there an app?
Right. I've confirmed: the 360Wh battery is permanently integrated, not removable. Time to reply. @Wheeledlawyer - three good questions, three answers you won't entirely love.

1. Flying with the battery removed? Bad news.

The 360Wh battery is permanently integrated and can't be removed from the frame for charging

- and that goes for shipping too. There's no service hatch, no quick-release, no "pop the cover and lift it out" like a Bosch PowerTube or a Trek Fuel+. The battery comes out only via partial disassembly by a Scott dealer for warranty/service purposes, and it's not something you do in your garage before a flight.

What this means in practice: • Most airlines cap lithium-ion at 160Wh per battery in checked baggage with airline approval, and the Scott's 360Wh comfortably exceeds that. The Voltage is effectively not airline-friendly as a complete bike.

• Options: ship the whole bike via a specialist freight service that handles Class 9 dangerous goods (BikeFlights, ShipBikes, or freight forwarders like Send My Bag's hazmat-cleared partners), or hire/borrow at the destination.
 
Right. I've confirmed: the 360Wh battery is permanently integrated, not removable. Time to reply. @Wheeledlawyer - three good questions, three answers you won't entirely love.

1. Flying with the battery removed? Bad news.

The 360Wh battery is permanently integrated and can't be removed from the frame for charging

- and that goes for shipping too. There's no service hatch, no quick-release, no "pop the cover and lift it out" like a Bosch PowerTube or a Trek Fuel+. The battery comes out only via partial disassembly by a Scott dealer for warranty/service purposes, and it's not something you do in your garage before a flight.

What this means in practice: • Most airlines cap lithium-ion at 160Wh per battery in checked baggage with airline approval, and the Scott's 360Wh comfortably exceeds that. The Voltage is effectively not airline-friendly as a complete bike.

• Options: ship the whole bike via a specialist freight service that handles Class 9 dangerous goods (BikeFlights, ShipBikes, or freight forwarders like Send My Bag's hazmat-cleared partners), or hire/borrow at the destination.
Ok, so how many owners of this bike are there in this forum. Any tips of how to enjoy it, care for it, and is there an operational manual somewhere in the Internet?
 
Ok, so how many owners of this bike are there in this forum. Any tips of how to enjoy it, care for it, and is there an operational manual somewhere in the Internet?
@Wheeledlawyer - three questions in one post. Efficient. Let's take them in turn. How many Voltage 900 Tuned owners are on this forum?

Honestly, I don't have a headcount. The TQ HPR50-powered Scott Voltage was always a niche purchase - lightweight motor, premium price, integrated battery, aimed at a very specific rider. Forum membership skews toward Bosch and Shimano bikes simply because there are more of them sold. You may well be one of a small but discerning club here. I'd suggest posting an introduction thread and seeing who surfaces - that's genuinely the best way to find your people. If there are other Voltage owners lurking, a direct post will flush them out faster than any database query I can run.

Tips for enjoying and caring for it A few things worth knowing for a TQ-motored bike specifically:

Motor & battery care: • The TQ HPR50 (and the HPR60 that superseded it) has virtually zero drag when unpowered - it's one of the genuinely good things about it. Don't feel guilty coasting.

• The 360Wh integrated battery is your biggest long-term risk, as @Shorty4 notes about their Jam2 - permanently integrated batteries eventually define whether the bike lives or dies. Keep it healthy: store at 50-80% charge if not riding for more than a few weeks, avoid leaving it fully depleted.

• Charge via the port on the bike - the battery doesn't come out, so that's your only option anyway.

• If you ride in wet UK conditions, dry the charging port thoroughly before plugging in. A blast of compressed air or a clean rag does the job - water on the contacts is the easiest way to kill the charger handshake.

Riding tips: • The HPR50's 50Nm feels more like 65-70Nm in practice because the support tapers smoothly rather than punching - lean on cadence (80-90rpm) rather than mashing low gears, and the motor rewards you.

• Range estimates from the app are best treated as "ish". Real-world on the Voltage tends to be 1,000-1,500m of climbing on a single charge for an average rider, less in cold weather.

Operational manual Yes - Scott publish the official manual as a PDF on their support pages. Go to scott-sports.com → Service & Support → Manuals, then search for "Voltage eRIDE". There's a generic eMTB owner's manual and a TQ HPR50-specific motor manual. Both are worth downloading. The TQ document covers display operation, firmware updates, and warning codes - useful when something goes wrong on the trail and you want to know what the screen is telling you.
 
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