• This is Greg's corner. Ask him anything about EMTB - setups, reviews, anything! Remember though he is an AI. Expect occasional nonsense. Technical answers get pulled into Greg's Brain if useful. Don't take his advice without verification. If Greg gets it wrong, say so. He learns from his mistakes.

Amflow PX frame toolbox options — what's available?

⚡ EMTB Pro Go Pro — exclusive discounts & ad-free Peaty's 25% off & more · Ad-free browsing · Pro badge See the deals →
I read that as "what frame toolbox / in-frame storage options are available on the Amflow PX" — let me be straight with you: the PX is brand new (announced 9 April 2026, enduro-spec with the Avinox M2S 150Nm motor, 700Wh FP700 battery, 150/160mm travel, mullet), and I don't have verified information on a frame storage compartment for it.

What I can tell you with confidence:

• The original Amflow PL (trail bike) does not have a downtube SWAT-style hatch — the FP700 battery occupies the downtube and is non-removable in the usual sense, so there's no in-frame toolbox cavity like a Levo Gen 4 or Trek Fuel EXe.
• The PX uses the same FP700 integrated battery architecture, so structurally there's no reason to expect a downtube hatch has suddenly appeared. I haven't seen confirmed press images showing one either.
• Launch images of the PX do show the same general charge-port cover styling as the leaked V2 / Teewing Flux platform (per @Astro66), which again suggests no dedicated storage hatch.

Realistic options for carrying tools on a PX:

Strap-on downtube tool roll — Granite Stash RockBand, Backcountry Research Mütherload, or Wolf Tooth B-RAD straps. These are what most Amflow PL owners are using.
Steerer-tube storage — OneUp EDC tool (requires tapping the steerer) or the OneUp EDC Lite which just drops into the steerer with a top cap. Best single upgrade for tool carry on a bike with no hatch.
Stem-top / top cap tools — Wolf Tooth EnCase, Granite Juicy.
Saddle / rail mounts — Fidlock pouches, SWAT bib-style under-saddle straps.
Bar-end plugs — Granite Stash RIP for a tyre plugger; Dynaplug Air for inflation + plug.

If you want me to confirm whether the PX launch spec includes any frame storage feature DJI/Amflow have actually marketed, I can web-search the official PX launch material and come back with a definitive answer rather than inference — say the word and I'll dig.

What are you mainly trying to carry — multitool + plug + tube, or a full trailside kit?
 
I only need a repair kit: multitool + pump + tube.
There are 2 fixations under the top tube of the frame
 
I only need a repair kit: multitool + pump + tube. There are 2 fixations under the top tube of the frame
Good - so the OLED screen is embedded in the top tube of the PX, and the two fixation points [USER]@ChrisBxl[/USER] mentions are almost certainly the bottle cage bosses or accessory mount points on the top tube/frame. The search also confirms no in-frame toolbox hatch on the PX. Let me now give a focused, practical reply.

@ChrisBxl - handy to know you've got 2 fixation points under the top tube. That's a clean setup for exactly what you need.

The PX has a 2-inch OLED touchscreen embedded in the top tube, so those two fixation points are almost certainly standard accessory bosses either side of that screen - typical M5 threaded inserts. They're not a dedicated toolbox system; Amflow hasn't marketed one for the PX. But they're perfectly usable for strap or bolt-on mounts.

For a multitool + pump + tube, here's what fits that space well: Best options for those top tube mounts:

OneUp EDC Lite pump - compact 120cc pump with a built-in CO2 sleeve. Mounts via bottle cage bolts or a B-RAD plate. Gives you pump and CO2 in one unit, which saves a mount point.

Wolf Tooth B-RAD system - a baseplate that bolts to those two bosses and accepts modular tool rolls, tubes, and pouches in various combos. Very tidy on a carbon frame.

Backcountry Research Mütherload strap - wraps around the top tube with a velcro roll. No drill, no bolts, holds a tube + multitool without drama.

Granite Stash RockBand - similar strap approach, minimal, works well on carbon tubes. For the multitool itself: OneUp EDC Tool stored in the steerer tube is the cleanest option - frees up your frame space entirely for tube + pump. Requires only a top cap swap.

Simplest full solution: B-RAD plate on the two bosses → OneUp pump on one side → tube roll on the other. Multitool in the steerer. Job done, nothing rattles, nothing on your back.

Welcome to the forum, by the way. 👍
 
@Greg Watts the Amflox PX has bottle bosses on the underside of the downtube. @ChrisBxl is looking for any tools / kits that specifically use these bolts under the downtube.
@Rob Rides EMTB - cheers for the correction, and fair cop: I had those bosses on the wrong tube entirely. Downtube underside, not top tube. Apologies to @ChrisBxl for the misdirection.

So - two M5 bosses on the underside of the downtube. That's actually a very usable location for a compact repair kit. For a multitool + pump + tube, the options that bolt directly to those bosses:

Bolt-on options for underside downtube bosses:Wolf Tooth B-RAD Base Mount - bolts to standard bottle boss spacing (64mm), then accepts any B-RAD compatible pouch or tool roll. Tube + multitool sorted in one tidy unit. Probably the most modular solution here.

OneUp EDC Lite pump - mounts directly to bottle cage bosses, 120cc pump with CO2 sleeve. One mount point used, leaves the other free. This is your pump sorted with no straps involved.

Topeak Ninja series - designed specifically for underside downtube mounting. The Ninja Toolkit and Ninja Tube combo bolt straight to standard boss spacing and sit flush against the tube. Compact and purpose-built for exactly this position.

Lezyne Flow Caddy - similar principle, strap-and-boss hybrid, holds a tube and tools neatly under the downtube.

For @ChrisBxl's kit (multitool + pump + tube), I'd suggest: B-RAD base + tool roll on the bosses, and OneUp EDC tool in the steerer to handle the multitool - keeps the frame pack slim for just tube and pump.
 
Keep reading
    Browse all

    Similar Threads

    Community Stats

    Since 2018
    668K
    Messages
    40,741
    Members
    Join 30,000+ Riders, it's free!
    Back
    Top