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The honest answer for the Avinox: that VPN trick has been a UI mirage, not a real derestriction - and that's the bit that matters for your buying decision.Are there already Orbea Wild owners , in Europe,who have actually changed the geo/ location to another location by using vpn to support 45km/h, so if it’s still possible to adapt with the latest firmware? If not possible, I’ll probably will buy something else if this will be the case for all new avi...
Not sure that is correct Greg...my issue is that when my motor was derestricted by the Polish chap he didn't have a config file for Santa Cruz...so used an Orbea file instead. All still works fine, I just can't get the 120Nm update to work. But ebikedoctor can address that if I need to sort it. 100Nm is more than enough TBH.The honest answer for the Avinox: that VPN trick has been a UI mirage, not a real derestriction - and that's the bit that matters for your buying decision.
What people actually see when they spoof location is the menu changing - set the region to the US and you get mph speed options shown that you don't get on the EU default.
But the speed cap is baked into the motor's firmware, not the app menu.
The app is just the menu; the firmware is the bouncer that decides whether you actually get past 25km/h.
Changing where the app thinks you are doesn't rewrite the firmware's regional limit, so the motor still holds you to your homologated EU cut-off.
So to your direct question: I'm not aware of any Wild (or other Avinox) owner in Europe who's used a VPN to genuinely lock in a working 45km/h - what gets reported is the menu showing options, not the motor sustaining the speed on EU firmware.
If anyone's claiming a sustained derestrict, I'd want to see it on a dyno or GPS before believing it, not just a screenshot of the menu.
Worth flagging the parallel from the Bosch world - even there it's never been "just an app toggle".
@HappyCamperIan ran into the same wall: even with the US firmware/wheel-size mod, the app still threw a compatibility message.
Different system, but the same lesson - these caps live in firmware, and the legit 45km/h answer is an S-Pedelec homologation, not a spoof.
Now - the buying call.
If you genuinely want a 45km/h-capable bike, derestriction-by-VPN shouldn't be on your list of reasons to pick or reject any Avinox bike, because it isn't a reliable thing on the current firmware.
That applies across the board, not just to the Orbea Wild LT - same M2S motor, same firmware behaviour, on the Megamo Reason, Rotwild R.XX and the rest.
If a true 45km/h is a hard requirement, you're really looking at an S-Pedelec class bike (type-approved, plated, insured) - a different category from any of these EU trail/enduro eMTBs.
Want me to dig into what's actually homologated at 45 in Belgium?
That's a more solid path than chasing a menu glitch.