When buying an e-bike with Avinox, regardless of the brand
The first units of any new platform—especially those with powerful motors, large batteries, and complex carbon frames—deserve a proper commissioning process. This is not alarmism; it is basic preventive maintenance.
The list of early issues observed so far is short and, above all, manageable:
Check the motor mounting bolts and confirm the torque specified by the manufacturer.
Perform a proper PDI (Pre-Delivery Inspection), not just taking the bike out of the box: headset, stem, handlebar, brake calipers, axles, linkages, suspension, and lubrication.
Ensure the dropper post has the correct height and insertion depth before spending money on one with more travel.
On high-pivot frames, monitor the idler from the start: free rotation, play, chain alignment, and noise. It is an additional wear component, not a defect in itself.
Be clear about how the brand or distributor handles spare parts, warranty, and Avinox diagnostics. With newer brands, this can be as important as the spec sheet.
As of today, there is no solid public evidence of repeated frame failures, widespread structural issues in high-pivot systems, endemic Avinox motor failures, or a global recall campaign.
The most sensible recommendation when receiving the bike is simple: request or perform a documented torque inspection, check the headset and linkages, apply witness marks on critical bolts—motor, pivots, stem, and calipers—and carry out a second full inspection after the first 50–100 km.
An e-bike weighing 23 kg, with 800 Wh and over 100 Nm, should not be treated like a conventional bicycle. When properly checked from day one, most potential issues are detected before becoming actual failures.