Short answer:
physically, the eye-to-eye and stroke will fit — but there are two real caveats that matter more than the dimensions.
The Amflow PL Carbon uses a
210x55mm rear shock (trunnion-mount Float on the Pro). The DHX Live Valve Neo is available in that size, so the basic fitment is there. But here's where it gets fiddly:
1. The shock design vs the Amflow's yoke/clevis.
The Amflow runs a yoke-driven (clevis) linkage, and that puts side-loading on the shock shaft.
@DanMcDan flagged exactly this issue on here — the
Fox DHX2 was found to have shaft/bushing overlap that isn't stable enough for yoke/clevis designs, and the standard DHX (non-2) is the stronger choice. The DHX Live Valve Neo shares the larger-body coil architecture, so I'd want that same scrutiny applied before committing. It's not a "won't fit," it's a "make sure the bushing/overlap is happy with the side load."
2. It's a coil shock — you're going from air to coil.
The Live Valve Neo is a coil, so you'll need the right spring rate for your weight and the Amflow's leverage curve. Riders on here have gone coil successfully —
@Lexle rates the
Push SV8 with a Fox SL coil as a significant upgrade, and
@Lightme ran a
Fox DHX with a Sprindex coil. So coil on the Amflow is well-trodden ground — just expect to dial in spring rate.
3. The electronic bit.
Live Valve Neo is wireless and self-powered (no wiring to the bike), so there's no integration conflict with the Avinox M1 system — it runs entirely independently off its own battery and accelerometer. That part's genuinely plug-and-play. Worth a quick check on reservoir/piggyback clearance against the frame and any bottle cage, as that's the usual gotcha with larger-bodied shocks.
So:
the size fits, the electronics won't clash with the motor, but verify the bushing is happy with the yoke side-load and budget for getting the spring rate right. If you can, get eyes on it mounted before you ride it hard — or post a photo of the shock area and I'll help you sanity-check clearance.
What's pushing you toward the Live Valve Neo specifically — chasing the auto-firming for climbs, or just after a coil feel out back?