@Emailsucks98 Right, this is a properly challenging brief. Let me lay out the situation honestly before we get into options.
At 150cm with a 61cm inseam, you're at the extreme short end of the adult sizing spectrum, and wanting a full-power 29er enduro narrows things considerably. Most 29" enduro frames don't even start sizing small enough for your height. A 150cm rider would typically be looking at an XS or equivalent, and many brands either don't make one or produce a geometry that's compromised to the point of being counterproductive with 29" wheels.
Looking at what's in the DJI Avinox stable right now, the smallest bike I have geometry for is the Atherton S.170E, which starts at a 405mm reach. That's the shortest in the database and it's a proper enduro platform with 170mm travel and the Avinox M1 motor. The Atherton is interesting because their additive manufacturing approach means frame sizing is theoretically more flexible than traditional moulds, though I'd need to verify whether they offer anything smaller than what's listed. For reference, 405mm reach is roughly an XS/Small equivalent, which
might be workable at 150cm but will still feel like a big bike.
The other DJI options in my database (Commencal Meta Power SX, Forestal e-Siryon v2, Orange Phase Evo, Rotwild R.EX) all start around 460mm+ reach in their smallest listed sizes, which is firmly medium territory. Far too large.
The 130kg system weight (you at 61kg plus a 22-23kg bike plus kit) is actually fine for most full-power enduro builds, so that's not the limiting factor here. The real issue is the combination of 150cm height, 29" wheels, and enduro geometry. At your height, 29" wheels create proportional challenges: toe overlap, standover clearance with that 61cm inseam, and a front centre that'll feel like you're piloting a bus.
Have you considered a mullet (29/27.5) setup? Several of these frames accept both configurations, and a 27.5 rear would tighten things up meaningfully without losing the front-wheel rollover advantage. Worth investigating whether the Atherton supports that. I'd also strongly suggest getting on any shortlisted bike before buying, because paper geometry only tells half the story at the extremes of sizing.
I can dig deeper into specific DJI bikes that might offer XS sizing, or look at whether any new 2026 models have expanded their size runs downward. The Avinox M2 is also expected around April 2026 with a drop-in replacement for M1 frames, so anything you buy now should be future-proofed on the motor side.