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Brose S Mag motor support at SRAM service centers post-phaseout?

dezzracer

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Hello Greg,
I have a 2024 GasGas MXC 6 with Brose S Mag motor. I’ve heard it’s being phased out. Considering it’s a SRAM ecosystem will a SRAM authorized service center have the needed parts and be able to address any future service requirements of that motor? Thanks!
 
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Hello Greg, I have a 2024 GasGas MXC 6 with Brose S Mag motor. I’ve heard it’s being phased out. Considering it’s a SRAM ecosystem will a SRAM authorized service center have the needed parts and be able to address any future service requirements of that motor? Thanks!
@dezzracer Good question, and it's one worth thinking through carefully given what's happening with the platform.

The short answer: SRAM authorised service centres can handle routine servicing, but they are not the safety net for the Brose motor itself.

Here's the distinction that matters:

What SRAM service centres cover:

• The SRAM Eagle AXS drivetrain, brakes, and electrical ecosystem - fully supported

• The Eagle Powertrain display, controls, and app connectivity

• Firmware updates via the SRAM AXS app

What they don't cover:

• Internal Brose motor work.

The Brose Drive S Mag is an open-OEM unit - it's licenced to SRAM for the Eagle Powertrain platform, but Brose themselves are the motor manufacturer.

Internal repairs require a Brose-authorised service point, not a SRAM dealer.

On the "phasing out" concern: you're right that the S Mag is being superseded on some platforms, but Brose is still a going concern and still manufacturing.

Parts availability tends to follow production volume - it won't disappear overnight.

The bigger unknown is a 5 - 8 year horizon, which nobody can honestly answer yet.

Practical advice for Las Vegas: Find out which local dealer was the GasGas/SRAM Eagle Powertrain authorised point before the brand wound down, and establish whether they still hold Brose service tooling.

That's your real insurance, more than the SRAM ecosystem label.
 
@dezzracer Good question, and it's one worth thinking through carefully given what's happening with the platform.

The short answer: SRAM authorised service centres can handle routine servicing, but they are not the safety net for the Brose motor itself.

Here's the distinction that matters:

What SRAM service centres cover:

• The SRAM Eagle AXS drivetrain, brakes, and electrical ecosystem - fully supported

• The Eagle Powertrain display, controls, and app connectivity

• Firmware updates via the SRAM AXS app

What they don't cover:

• Internal Brose motor work.

The Brose Drive S Mag is an open-OEM unit - it's licenced to SRAM for the Eagle Powertrain platform, but Brose themselves are the motor manufacturer.

Internal repairs require a Brose-authorised service point, not a SRAM dealer.

On the "phasing out" concern: you're right that the S Mag is being superseded on some platforms, but Brose is still a going concern and still manufacturing.

Parts availability tends to follow production volume - it won't disappear overnight.

The bigger unknown is a 5 - 8 year horizon, which nobody can honestly answer yet.

Practical advice for Las Vegas: Find out which local dealer was the GasGas/SRAM Eagle Powertrain authorised point before the brand wound down, and establish whether they still hold Brose service tooling.

That's your real insurance, more than the SRAM ecosystem label.
Good info thank you. For sake of conversation let’s say the motor implodes. Could a new different motor be installed that’s compatible with the SRAM AXS ecosystem? Especially considering it has Auto and coast shift capability. Thanks!
 
Good info thank you. For sake of conversation let’s say the motor implodes. Could a new different motor be installed that’s compatible with the SRAM AXS ecosystem? Especially considering it has Auto and coast shift capability. Thanks!
@dezzracer Good question - and honestly, it's the crux of the matter with any platform that's being wound down. The short answer: not without significant compromise, and probably not in a way that preserves Auto Shift and coast shifting.

Here's why: The motor mount problem

The SRAM Eagle Powertrain (which is what your MXC 6 actually runs - a SRAM Eagle Powertrain with Brose S Mag architecture underneath) uses a proprietary motor mount specific to that platform. You can't simply drop in a Shimano EP801 or a Bosch CX - the motor pocket in the frame is designed around the Eagle Powertrain unit. So you're not just buying a motor, you're potentially looking at a new frame.

The Auto Shift / coast shift dependency This is where it gets trickier. The Auto Shift and coast-shift features on your bike are a function of the SRAM AXS ecosystem talking directly to the Eagle Powertrain motor - the derailleur, motor, and firmware are all speaking the same language. From what I understand, no other current motor platform replicates that specific integration. The DJI Avinox platform supports a similar seamless-shift feature with SRAM AXS, but that's on different frame platforms designed around it - not a drop-in for your GasGas.

Realistic scenario If the motor implodes out of warranty, the honest answer is: you're looking at a used Eagle Powertrain replacement unit (same motor family), not a cross-platform transplant. That ecosystem is niche enough that a like-for-like swap is your only realistic path to preserving the full feature set.

Worth keeping an eye on used parts from the Transition Repeater and similar Eagle Powertrain bikes as they cycle through the secondhand market.
 
@dezzracer Good question - and honestly, it's the crux of the matter with any platform that's being wound down. The short answer: not without significant compromise, and probably not in a way that preserves Auto Shift and coast shifting.

Here's why: The motor mount problem

The SRAM Eagle Powertrain (which is what your MXC 6 actually runs - a SRAM Eagle Powertrain with Brose S Mag architecture underneath) uses a proprietary motor mount specific to that platform. You can't simply drop in a Shimano EP801 or a Bosch CX - the motor pocket in the frame is designed around the Eagle Powertrain unit. So you're not just buying a motor, you're potentially looking at a new frame.

The Auto Shift / coast shift dependency This is where it gets trickier. The Auto Shift and coast-shift features on your bike are a function of the SRAM AXS ecosystem talking directly to the Eagle Powertrain motor - the derailleur, motor, and firmware are all speaking the same language. From what I understand, no other current motor platform replicates that specific integration. The DJI Avinox platform supports a similar seamless-shift feature with SRAM AXS, but that's on different frame platforms designed around it - not a drop-in for your GasGas.

Realistic scenario If the motor implodes out of warranty, the honest answer is: you're looking at a used Eagle Powertrain replacement unit (same motor family), not a cross-platform transplant. That ecosystem is niche enough that a like-for-like swap is your only realistic path to preserving the full feature set.

Worth keeping an eye on used parts from the Transition Repeater and similar Eagle Powertrain bikes as they cycle through the secondhand market.
 
That’s what I thought (unfortunately). I was more concerned about the motor mount architecture than I was the Auto shift and coast features which I could live without.
 
@dezzracer - yeah, that's the crux of it really. The motor mount architecture is the hard wall. The Auto Shift and coast features are nice-to-have losses you could live with; a proprietary motor pocket that nothing else fits is a structural dead end.

The realistic options if the motor implodes out of warranty are pretty limited: 1. Like-for-like replacement

A used SRAM Eagle Powertrain unit - same motor family, same mount, same firmware ecosystem. The Eagle Powertrain platform wasn't massively widespread, so used supply is thin, but it's your cleanest path. Worth monitoring eBay and specialist eMTB breakers as bikes from that platform trickle through the secondhand market.

2. Source through the GasGas/Pieter AG supply chain while it lasts From what you've posted before, Pieter AG wound down the mountain bike side, but components may still be available through distributors who held stock. Worth a direct enquiry to whoever handled the GasGas MTB line in North America - a NOS motor unit at cost is a better outcome than hunting used.

3. Accept it's a finite-life bike Not what anyone wants to hear, but it's worth going in clear-eyed. Ride it, maintain it well, keep an eye on used Eagle Powertrain parts, and treat the motor as the long-term expiry date on the platform.

The honest position: cross-platform motor swaps on proprietary mount architectures aren't a realistic DIY solution. Like-for-like or nothing.
 
That’s what I thought (unfortunately). I was more concerned about the motor mount architecture than I was the Auto shift and coast features which I could live without.
@dezzracer - yeah, that's the honest landing point really. The motor mount is the structural constraint; everything else is just features you're either glad to have or can live without.

The practical upshot: look after the motor, keep on top of servicing, and build a small contingency fund for a used Eagle Powertrain unit if the worst happens. The Transition Repeater ran the same platform, and as those bikes age into the second-hand market, spare Eagle Powertrain units should become easier to find. Not a long list of donors, but not zero either.

Beyond that - ride it, enjoy it. Las Vegas trails in summer are prime time for this kind of bike, and the MXC 6 is a solid machine. Just go in clear-eyed about the long-term parts picture, which you clearly already are.

If anything else comes up down the line - motor service questions, suspension setup, shroud hunting, whatever - just tag me again. @dezzracer, good luck with it. 🤙
 
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