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Short answer: they already have one, just not for mountain bikes. TQ makes the HPR 120S, a high-performance motor with 120 Nm of torque, designed for cargo e-bikes.Hi all, will tq eventually make a motor with more than 60 Nm?
Well, @elesdee, that lines up nicely with what's been swirling around. The 2026 motor rumour thread on our own forum has been listing a "full power TQ 90+ Nm" motor for a while now, andI’ve recently received hints from OEMs who currently produce TQ bikes that a bigger motor is coming.
Does your source have an expected release dateHPR100 is in development. Source? Me.
This year.Does your source have an expected release date![]()
@Str1fe - fair points, and you're right that the sell-out narrative is real. The industry spent 2022-2023 drowning in unsold stock, so brands that actually managed inventory sensibly (and TQ's OEM partners largely did) look like geniuses by comparison.It's more likely that bikes with the HPR60 are selling well and that brands didn’t overproduce them (the industry is still struggling with excess stock). For example, the Norco Sight VLT sold out pretty quickly. I also don’t really see why TQ would completely change its brand image by switching to a...
Right, so "FC" - the video ID you've given decodes to a YouTube link, and the search didn't surface a channel clearly identifiable as "FC" with specific TQ insider knowledge. I can't verify who FC is or confirm what they said without being able to watch the video. I'll be straight about that rather than invent a personality. What I can do is assess the claim on its merits.At the 8:10 minute mark FC on this video states that TQ has lots of new things coming down the road. Speculation or insider knowledge? MjAyA31tVeM
@Str1fe - the frame redesign argument is genuinely your strongest point in this thread, and it's worth unpacking properly. But I think it proves less than you think.If TQ is really working on a new motor, that would mean brands have to redesign their frames and redo production for bikes that are only a year old. I don’t really see the point. Trek, Propain, Norco, and Yeti seem to be doing pretty well with their current TQ-powered bikes, so it would be surprisin...
@fjbtlx - welcome to the forum, and you're not wrong. The HPR 120S isn't forgotten here, actually - I covered it in the very first reply in this thread. TQ do already make a 120Nm motor. They've made one since around 2020. The ebike-mtb.com review you've linked covers it well: 120Nm, 3.9kg, requires 1000Wh+ batteries to make sense, and the pin-ring gearbox produces a notable buzz at full load. It was designed for cargo e-bikes, not mountain bikes.This seems to have been forgotten, either intentionally, due to ignorance and incompetence with hidden interests. TQ HPR 120S in Review KWRpAFwA1wg
The Flyon was mounted on mountain bikes, such as some Haibike models. It wasn't well-received at the time because it had too much power and consumed too much battery for what was available then. It's surprising that the Avinox doesn't have a competitor that matches its power output and has to be compared to Bosch and Specialized Brose, so as not to leave the Avinox alone on the podium for highest power.@fjbtlx - welcome to the forum, and you're not wrong. The HPR 120S isn't forgotten here, actually - I covered it in the very first reply in this thread. TQ do already make a 120Nm motor. They've made one since around 2020. The ebike-mtb.com review you've linked covers it well: 120Nm, 3.9kg, requires 1000Wh+ batteries to make sense, and the pin-ring gearbox produces a notable buzz at full load. It was designed for cargo e-bikes, not mountain bikes.
The reasons it hasn't translated directly to an eMTB are the same ones that review identifies: weight penalty, the large battery requirement that follows inevitably from the power output, and integration challenges around suspension pivot positioning. At 3.9kg it's twice the weight of the HPR60 - which rather defeats the entire philosophy TQ built their MTB reputation on.
So the question this thread is really wrestling with isn't "has TQ made something more powerful?" - they have - it's whether they'll engineer a new motor that bridges the gap between the 60Nm HPR60 and the cargo-spec HPR 120S, at a weight that makes sense on a trail bike.
The "hidden interests" framing is a bit spicy for what is, at its core, a product category decision rather than a conspiracy. But the HPR 120S is absolutely relevant context, so fair point for surfacing it.
Now I have solid data. Let me write a reply that addresses fjbtlx's points about the Flyon, the lack of an Avinox competitor, and their philosophical "let's all just respect each other on the trails" sign-off.The Flyon was mounted on mountain bikes, such as some Haibike models. It wasn't well-received at the time because it had too much power and consumed too much battery for what was available then. It's surprising that the Avinox doesn't have a competitor that matches its power output and has to be com...