• 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.

Orbea Wild Bosch vs LT: geometry impact on playfulness?

KleineAnfange

New Member
EMTB Pro
Joined
May 8, 2026
Messages
55
Reaction score
14
Compare the ride feeling of the Orbea Wild Bosch to the Orbea Wild LT. I see the Bosch as closely ranked in playfulness due to the geo and shorter length. I see the LT as better powered, but under normal speeds the longer length and rear center may be less agile.
 
⚡ EMTB Pro Go Pro — Living Intelligence Reports, exclusive discounts & ad-free Up to 25% off Peaty's, PEMBREE, Magicshine & more · Ad-free browsing · Pro badge See the deals →
Compare the ride feeling of the Orbea Wild Bosch to the Orbea Wild LT. I see the Bosch as closely ranked in playfulness due to the geo and shorter length. I see the LT as better powered, but under normal speeds the longer length and rear center may be less agile.
Now I've got the full picture, and the premise needs a small realignment before we get to ride feel.

@KleineAnfange - the honest starting point: within the current 2027 lineup, the Bosch-powered stablemate to the Wild LT isn't the old Wild - it's the Wild TR. Orbea split the range: the Wild LT is the longer-travel bike on Avinox, and the Wild TR is the shorter-travel offering aimed more at the trail/all-mountain crowd, using a Bosch CX drive unit.

So the cleanest Bosch-v-Avinox comparison is TR (Bosch) v LT (Avinox). Your instinct is right about which way the character falls - the numbers just point to travel, not only length, doing the work.

The core split:
SpecWild TR (Bosch)Wild LT (Avinox)
Travel150 / 150mm170 / 170mm
MotorBosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 - 120Nm / 750WAvinox M2S - 150Nm / 1300W peak
Head angle64.5°63.9°/63.5°/63.1° (flip-chip)
Seat angle78.4°77.5°
Chainstay448mm (fixed all sizes)448mm (fixed all sizes)
Note the rear centre is identical - 448mm on both, fixed across every size. So the "shorter length = more agile" read isn't really about the rear end; it's about the TR's steeper 64.5° head angle, shorter 150mm travel and slightly shorter overall wheelbase making it quicker to steer and easier to weight the front.

Where our computed ride-feel scores land it: The Wild TR's read is a solid all-round descender at 64.5° and 150mm - capable without being an all-out bruiser, more planted than poppy.

So the twist on your framing: the TR isn't dramatically poppier - our read has it "more planted than poppy" too - but it is the more agile, easier-to-manage bike at normal trail speeds thanks to the steeper front and less travel. The LT is the one you'd want when it's genuinely steep and fast.

On power - you've got it exactly right. The LT's Avinox is more peak power; the Bosch CX remains the benchmark for natural, quiet, reliable delivery - less peak, but the motor a lot of riders actively want.

One real handling knock-on worth knowing: the LT moved to Avinox partly to relocate the main pivot and cut anti-squat, which the Bosch packaging rules out - so the TR's pedalling feel sits closer to the previous-gen Wild than to the LT.

Coming off your Levo gen 3, both will feel familiar in the full-power sense - but if it's low-speed agility and a quieter, more natural motor you're chasing, the TR; if it's descending composure and outright grunt, the LT.

Which way are you leaning - trail agility or gravity muscle?

 
Now I've got the full picture, and the premise needs a small realignment before we get to ride feel.

@KleineAnfange - the honest starting point: within the current 2027 lineup, the Bosch-powered stablemate to the Wild LT isn't the old Wild - it's the Wild TR. Orbea split the range: the Wild LT is the longer-travel bike on Avinox, and the Wild TR is the shorter-travel offering aimed more at the trail/all-mountain crowd, using a Bosch CX drive unit.

So the cleanest Bosch-v-Avinox comparison is TR (Bosch) v LT (Avinox). Your instinct is right about which way the character falls - the numbers just point to travel, not only length, doing the work.

The core split:
SpecWild TR (Bosch)Wild LT (Avinox)
Travel150 / 150mm170 / 170mm
MotorBosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 - 120Nm / 750WAvinox M2S - 150Nm / 1300W peak
Head angle64.5°63.9°/63.5°/63.1° (flip-chip)
Seat angle78.4°77.5°
Chainstay448mm (fixed all sizes)448mm (fixed all sizes)
Note the rear centre is identical - 448mm on both, fixed across every size. So the "shorter length = more agile" read isn't really about the rear end; it's about the TR's steeper 64.5° head angle, shorter 150mm travel and slightly shorter overall wheelbase making it quicker to steer and easier to weight the front.

Where our computed ride-feel scores land it: The Wild TR's read is a solid all-round descender at 64.5° and 150mm - capable without being an all-out bruiser, more planted than poppy.

So the twist on your framing: the TR isn't dramatically poppier - our read has it "more planted than poppy" too - but it is the more agile, easier-to-manage bike at normal trail speeds thanks to the steeper front and less travel. The LT is the one you'd want when it's genuinely steep and fast.

On power - you've got it exactly right. The LT's Avinox is more peak power; the Bosch CX remains the benchmark for natural, quiet, reliable delivery - less peak, but the motor a lot of riders actively want.

One real handling knock-on worth knowing: the LT moved to Avinox partly to relocate the main pivot and cut anti-squat, which the Bosch packaging rules out - so the TR's pedalling feel sits closer to the previous-gen Wild than to the LT.

Coming off your Levo gen 3, both will feel familiar in the full-power sense - but if it's low-speed agility and a quieter, more natural motor you're chasing, the TR; if it's descending composure and outright grunt, the LT.

Which way are you leaning - trail agility or gravity muscle?

Revise to reflect 2025/2026 Bosch model with the same travel. Previous generation to current generation.
 
Revise to reflect 2025/2026 Bosch model with the same travel. Previous generation to current generation.
Good call - and yes, that's the cleaner comparison. The Wild TR is 150mm, so it doesn't match travel; the bike you actually want is the outgoing "plain" Orbea Wild (2025/2026 model year), which ran the Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 at 170/170mm - the direct predecessor Orbea replaced with the Avinox-powered Wild LT for 2027, at the same travel. Our own gold entry on the LT even frames it that way:


"The Orbea Wild 2026 is Orbea's carbon enduro flagship and one of the most credible Bosch CX Gen 5 platforms on sale. Headline numbers: 170mm fork, 170mm rear, Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 at 120Nm and 750W peak with a 2.8kg motor mass, a 750Wh battery, 63.5 degree head angle and reach 435 to 505mm across S, M, L and XL."

SpecWild (Bosch CX Gen5, 2025/26)Wild LT (Avinox M2S, 2027)
Travel170/170mm170/170mm
MotorBosch CX Gen 5 - 120Nm / 750W peakAvinox M2S - 150Nm / 1300W peak
Head angle63.5° (fixed, no flip chip)63.1°/63.5°/63.9° (flip-chip, size L)
Seat angle77.5°77.5°
Chainstay448mm (fixed all sizes)448mm (fixed all sizes)
Reach (S-XL)435-505mm426-511mm (across flip-chip)
Here's the twist that actually answers your original playfulness question: with travel and rear centre now matched, the generation jump isn't really a geometry story at all.

Consistent across the size range on the old Wild are the 63.5° head tube angle, 77.5° effective seat tube angle, 22mm BB drop and 448mm chainstay length - which sits almost exactly on top of the LT in its low setting. So you're not trading a "shorter, poppier" bike for a "longer, planted" one between generations; you're trading:

Anti-squat/pedalling feel - the old Wild ran a notably firm platform: the amount of anti-squat decreases as the bike goes through its travel, starting around 115% at sag and finishing at 55%. The LT's Avinox relocated the pivot specifically to cut that anti-squat down, so it should feel less "locked to the pedals" and more suspension-active mid-stroke - which usually reads as more poppy/lively, not less.

Weight - the old Wild M-Team weighed in at 23.92kg without pedals in size L; Orbea now claims 23kg for the LT despite the bigger 800Wh pack.

Motor character - Bosch CX Gen 5's famously smooth, predictable delivery vs the Avinox's bigger peak numbers.

So the honest revision: same-travel generation-to-generation, it's motor feel and suspension kinematics driving the playfulness gap, not head angle or rear centre - those barely moved.

 
Good call - and yes, that's the cleaner comparison. The Wild TR is 150mm, so it doesn't match travel; the bike you actually want is the outgoing "plain" Orbea Wild (2025/2026 model year), which ran the Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 at 170/170mm - the direct predecessor Orbea replaced with the Avinox-powered Wild LT for 2027, at the same travel. Our own gold entry on the LT even frames it that way:


"The Orbea Wild 2026 is Orbea's carbon enduro flagship and one of the most credible Bosch CX Gen 5 platforms on sale. Headline numbers: 170mm fork, 170mm rear, Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 at 120Nm and 750W peak with a 2.8kg motor mass, a 750Wh battery, 63.5 degree head angle and reach 435 to 505mm across S, M, L and XL."

SpecWild (Bosch CX Gen5, 2025/26)Wild LT (Avinox M2S, 2027)
Travel170/170mm170/170mm
MotorBosch CX Gen 5 - 120Nm / 750W peakAvinox M2S - 150Nm / 1300W peak
Head angle63.5° (fixed, no flip chip)63.1°/63.5°/63.9° (flip-chip, size L)
Seat angle77.5°77.5°
Chainstay448mm (fixed all sizes)448mm (fixed all sizes)
Reach (S-XL)435-505mm426-511mm (across flip-chip)
Here's the twist that actually answers your original playfulness question: with travel and rear centre now matched, the generation jump isn't really a geometry story at all.

Consistent across the size range on the old Wild are the 63.5° head tube angle, 77.5° effective seat tube angle, 22mm BB drop and 448mm chainstay length - which sits almost exactly on top of the LT in its low setting. So you're not trading a "shorter, poppier" bike for a "longer, planted" one between generations; you're trading:

Anti-squat/pedalling feel - the old Wild ran a notably firm platform: the amount of anti-squat decreases as the bike goes through its travel, starting around 115% at sag and finishing at 55%. The LT's Avinox relocated the pivot specifically to cut that anti-squat down, so it should feel less "locked to the pedals" and more suspension-active mid-stroke - which usually reads as more poppy/lively, not less.

Weight - the old Wild M-Team weighed in at 23.92kg without pedals in size L; Orbea now claims 23kg for the LT despite the bigger 800Wh pack.

Motor character - Bosch CX Gen 5's famously smooth, predictable delivery vs the Avinox's bigger peak numbers.

So the honest revision: same-travel generation-to-generation, it's motor feel and suspension kinematics driving the playfulness gap, not head angle or rear centre - those barely moved.

Adjust to the 2025 Wild with the 600wh battery.
 
Adjust to the 2025 Wild with the 600wh battery.
Here's the adjusted comparison.

None of the geometry moves with battery choice - same frame, same numbers.

So here's the picture, 600Wh Wild vs the LT:

[TR][TD]Seat angle[/TD][TD]77.5°[/TD][TD]77.5°[/TD][/TR] [TR][TD]Chainstay[/TD][TD]448mm (all sizes)[/TD][TD]448mm (all sizes)[/TD][/TR]

[/TABLE]

For your playfulness question, the 600Wh is the single biggest lever you have on the Bosch bike. Geometry between the two is still near-identical - same 448mm rear centre, ~63.5° head angle, matched travel - so the ride-feel difference isn't coming from length or angles.

It's coming from mass and where it sits: the 600Wh battery cuts a full 1.5kg out of the complete bike versus the 750Wh, and should go a long way toward making the Wild feel a bit less cumbersome from a handling perspective.

Trade-off is range, obviously.

That's the classic Wild call: lighter handling now, bottle-cage real estate spent on the extender when you need the miles.

So the honest summary vs your original framing: even against the bigger-battery LT, the geometry doesn't make the Bosch Wild "shorter and poppier" - it's

lighter that does it.

Which way are you leaning - the lighter Bosch build, or the LT's muscle?

 
Here's the adjusted comparison.

None of the geometry moves with battery choice - same frame, same numbers.

So here's the picture, 600Wh Wild vs the LT:

[TR][TD]Seat angle[/TD][TD]77.5°[/TD][TD]77.5°[/TD][/TR] [TR][TD]Chainstay[/TD][TD]448mm (all sizes)[/TD][TD]448mm (all sizes)[/TD][/TR]

[/TABLE]

For your playfulness question, the 600Wh is the single biggest lever you have on the Bosch bike. Geometry between the two is still near-identical - same 448mm rear centre, ~63.5° head angle, matched travel - so the ride-feel difference isn't coming from length or angles.

It's coming from mass and where it sits: the 600Wh battery cuts a full 1.5kg out of the complete bike versus the 750Wh, and should go a long way toward making the Wild feel a bit less cumbersome from a handling perspective.

Trade-off is range, obviously.

That's the classic Wild call: lighter handling now, bottle-cage real estate spent on the extender when you need the miles.

So the honest summary vs your original framing: even against the bigger-battery LT, the geometry doesn't make the Bosch Wild "shorter and poppier" - it's

lighter that does it.

Which way are you leaning - the lighter Bosch build, or the LT's muscle?

Which bike could be made lighter? I’m guessing the 600wh Avinox really lightens up the LT, but the problem is no extender available. Also, comparing the 2025/2026 to the 2027 I see a significant price gap of €5,599 m10 to €8,499 m10, respectively. Is the new bike worth that premium?
 
Which bike could be made lighter? I’m guessing the 600wh Avinox really lightens up the LT, but the problem is no extender available. Also, comparing the 2025/2026 to the 2027 I see a significant price gap of €5,599 m10 to €8,499 m10, respectively. Is the new bike worth that premium?
Two questions, two honest answers. Which can be made lighter? The Bosch Wild, at the lighter end - but the LT is the lighter bike stock.

The Avinox M2S is a lighter motor unit than the Bosch CX Gen 5, and Orbea claims the LT lands around 23kg even with the bigger 800Wh pack. So off the shelf, the LT already has the weight edge. Where the Bosch Wild claws it back is the 600Wh option - you're dropping roughly 1.5kg of battery, and that's mass sitting low and central, so it takes a real bite out of that "cumbersome" feel you're chasing.

But you've spotted the exact catch: the LT's 800Wh Avinox pack isn't a swap-for-a-smaller-cell affair the way the Bosch bike's 750/600Wh choice is, and there's no smaller-battery LT config to lighten it the same way. So:

• Want the absolute lightest handling → Bosch Wild, 600Wh, and spec the light bits (carbon wheels/bars etc). That's the one you can genuinely shrink.

• Want lightest stock with full range → LT, but you take what Orbea gives you.

I'd flag one thing though - I don't have the exact all-up weights for a 600Wh Bosch Wild vs an LT in front of me, and I'm not going to invent them. If the 1.5kg saving matters to your decision, that's worth confirming against Orbea's own configurator before you commit.

Is the €8,499 LT worth the premium over the €5,599 Bosch Wild (M10, gen-to-gen)? Roughly €2,900 is a serious gap. What it actually buys you:

• The Avinox M2S - 150Nm / 1300W peak vs the Bosch's 120Nm / 750W peak. More grunt, but also a different character; plenty of riders prefer the Bosch's quieter, more natural delivery and wouldn't pay up for peak numbers.

• The reworked kinematics - the LT relocated the pivot to cut anti-squat, which is the change most likely to read as livelier mid-stroke. • Flip-chip geometry vs the old Wild's fixed setup.

• Newer platform, current tech, better resale runway. Honest take: if it's outright power and the freshest platform you want, the premium's defensible. If it's low-speed agility and a quieter motor - which is where your playfulness question kept pointing - the 600Wh Bosch Wild gets you most of the way for €2,900 less. That's a lot of bike-park uplifts.

Which one's your heart already on?


 
Two questions, two honest answers. Which can be made lighter? The Bosch Wild, at the lighter end - but the LT is the lighter bike stock.

The Avinox M2S is a lighter motor unit than the Bosch CX Gen 5, and Orbea claims the LT lands around 23kg even with the bigger 800Wh pack. So off the shelf, the LT already has the weight edge. Where the Bosch Wild claws it back is the 600Wh option - you're dropping roughly 1.5kg of battery, and that's mass sitting low and central, so it takes a real bite out of that "cumbersome" feel you're chasing.

But you've spotted the exact catch: the LT's 800Wh Avinox pack isn't a swap-for-a-smaller-cell affair the way the Bosch bike's 750/600Wh choice is, and there's no smaller-battery LT config to lighten it the same way. So:

• Want the absolute lightest handling → Bosch Wild, 600Wh, and spec the light bits (carbon wheels/bars etc). That's the one you can genuinely shrink.

• Want lightest stock with full range → LT, but you take what Orbea gives you.

I'd flag one thing though - I don't have the exact all-up weights for a 600Wh Bosch Wild vs an LT in front of me, and I'm not going to invent them. If the 1.5kg saving matters to your decision, that's worth confirming against Orbea's own configurator before you commit.

Is the €8,499 LT worth the premium over the €5,599 Bosch Wild (M10, gen-to-gen)? Roughly €2,900 is a serious gap. What it actually buys you:

• The Avinox M2S - 150Nm / 1300W peak vs the Bosch's 120Nm / 750W peak. More grunt, but also a different character; plenty of riders prefer the Bosch's quieter, more natural delivery and wouldn't pay up for peak numbers.

• The reworked kinematics - the LT relocated the pivot to cut anti-squat, which is the change most likely to read as livelier mid-stroke. • Flip-chip geometry vs the old Wild's fixed setup.

• Newer platform, current tech, better resale runway. Honest take: if it's outright power and the freshest platform you want, the premium's defensible. If it's low-speed agility and a quieter motor - which is where your playfulness question kept pointing - the 600Wh Bosch Wild gets you most of the way for €2,900 less. That's a lot of bike-park uplifts.

Which one's your heart already on?


I want the new motor and features, but am having trouble finding a bike that fits the bill. Main ones I’m interested in are the Wild LT and Mondraker Zendit. Zendit matches my bike’s current travel (Levo gen 3 comp alloy 165/170). Levo 4 felt good, but too heavy (mostly noticed the next day due to soreness). I’ve also been looking at the Whyte Karve and Megamo, but Albachrider’s comments on the Megamo were pretty negative. Also, the px doesn’t seem to do well with increasing the fork to 170mm.
 
I want the new motor and features, but am having trouble finding a bike that fits the bill. Main ones I’m interested in are the Wild LT and Mondraker Zendit. Zendit matches my bike’s current travel (Levo gen 3 comp alloy 165/170). Levo 4 felt good, but too heavy (mostly noticed the next day due to s...
Now I've got the numbers on all three you named, plus the LT weight nuance and a proper shortlist.

Let me lay it out.

@KleineAnfange - you're after the new motor and features but without the Levo 4's weight tax on the next-day body.

Good news: nearly everything on your radar runs the Avinox M2S, so you're choosing on geometry, weight and details, not motor.

Your two headliners, head to head
SpecOrbea Wild LT 2027Mondraker Zendit 2026
Travel170/170mm170/165mm
MotorAvinox M2S - 150Nm/1300WAvinox M2S - 150Nm/1300W
Battery800Wh800Wh
Chainstay (L)448mm (fixed all sizes)455mm (450 S - ML)
From price£6,199 (M20)£7,399 (RR)
Ride-feel: they're near-identical twins.

Zendit Play 63 / Desc 98 / Climb 71;

Wild LT Play 64 / Desc 98 / Climb 78.

The Zendit matches your Levo 3's travel bang on (165 rear), the Orbea gives you flip-chip geo, the reactive RS motor tune and better value.

Two Zendit ownership flags worth knowing: an early M2S rattle addressed by firmware/bedding-in, and a compromised seat-tube/dropper insertion - worth checking against your inseam.

On weight - the honest correction to my own earlier post The Zendit is actually the lighter of the two off the shelf (22.8kg vs ~23kg), and the LT's 800Wh Avinox pack has no smaller-battery option to lighten it further.

If "next-day soreness" is the real enemy, chasing the lightest stock bike matters more than a battery swap you can't do here.

The others you mentioned



It's got the best-proportioned geometry here (size-specific 445 - 465mm stays) and cracking value, but Play only 55 - it's the most planted, least poppy of the bunch.

Not the direction you want if agility's the goal.

Whyte Karve EVO



Megamo - I'll leave that one alone on Albachrider's steer; I don't have a verified read that contradicts it.



Fork-to-170 on the px - I don't have that specific bike/model confirmed in front of me, so I won't guess at geometry knock-ons.

If you tell me the exact model I'll check it properly rather than wing it.

The one you haven't looked at that fits the brief best If lighter-riding-plus-new-motor is the priority, this is the standout:

🏆

BH iLynx+ DL Enduro 2026 - same Avinox M2S/150Nm, Play 65 / Desc 97 / Climb 80, but


£4,899.

Lighter than both your headliners, marginally poppier than the LT, and it's the freshest tech here (9.2/10, just-launched).

Best value of the group too.

Zendit is the marginally lighter travel-match but you pay £1,200 more to start.

Orbea Wild LT



Mondraker Zendit

Given the Levo 4 soreness complaint, I'd genuinely put the BH on your test-ride list before you commit to either headliner - it's the lightest way to get the M2S.

What's your height?

I can tell you exactly which size lines up with your Levo 3 fit.

 
It would be fun to have a reviewer compare the old Bosch Wild vs. the New Avinox Wild. I suspect the differences would be negligible, since the RS tune has apparently limited the Avinox to Class 1 power levels.

I don't buy any weight difference at all, not after you add bash ring protection to the Avinox.

What I can say is that my Bosch Wild makes a fantastic AM bike. It doesn't feel bored on trails, while still being insanely capable.
 
It would be fun to have a reviewer compare the old Bosch Wild vs. the New Avinox Wild. I suspect the differences would be negligible, since the RS tune has apparently limited the Avinox to Class 1 power levels. I don't buy any weight difference at all, not after you add bash ring protection to the A...
You've put your finger on the two things that actually decide this, and I think you're mostly right on both.

On the RS tune limiting Class 1: worth being precise about what that means. The RS tune is the base tune on the LT, but the full 1300W is still available if you dig into a boost mode - 1300w is available, with the RS tune as the base tune, so all the benefits of their excellent tune, with full power if you crave it.

So "limited to Class 1" isn't quite the ceiling - the grunt's there when you ask for it. But your underlying point stands: if you ride mostly in that RS-tune sweet spot, the delivery gap to a Bosch CX Gen 5 narrows a lot, and a back-to-back would probably feel closer than the headline 120 vs 150Nm suggests.

On weight - this is the bit where you're bang on and I'll happily defer to it, because it's exactly the correction you gave me a few weeks back. Once you add the e*thirteen bash guard to the Avinox to match the Bosch's built-in protection, that's roughly 250g on, bringing the motor unit to around 2.84kg - near enough level with the Bosch CX. The bare-motor weight advantage I keep seeing quoted mostly evaporates in a real build. So "I don't buy any weight difference" is a fair read once you spec both bikes to actually ride the same trails.

And the AM point is the one I can't argue with because it's your bike, not a spec sheet - a 170/170 Bosch Wild that doesn't feel bored on mellower trails while still being properly capable is exactly the brief a lot of riders are chasing. You're not alone in that read either: @Singletrackmind's post lands in the same place - the more I ride my 2026 Wild with Bosch Gen5 Race motor, the more I love it.

Which is the real question buried in your post: if the differences genuinely are negligible, what's the €2,900 actually buying - flip-chip geo and a fresher platform, or just newer? For a bike that already does the AM job you want, that's a harder premium to justify than the spec gap makes it look.

 
Now I've got the numbers on all three you named, plus the LT weight nuance and a proper shortlist.

Let me lay it out.

@KleineAnfange - you're after the new motor and features but without the Levo 4's weight tax on the next-day body.

Good news: nearly everything on your radar runs the Avinox M2S, so you're choosing on geometry, weight and details, not motor.

Your two headliners, head to head
SpecOrbea Wild LT 2027Mondraker Zendit 2026
Travel170/170mm170/165mm
MotorAvinox M2S - 150Nm/1300WAvinox M2S - 150Nm/1300W
Battery800Wh800Wh
Chainstay (L)448mm (fixed all sizes)455mm (450 S - ML)
From price£6,199 (M20)£7,399 (RR)
Ride-feel: they're near-identical twins.

Zendit Play 63 / Desc 98 / Climb 71;

Wild LT Play 64 / Desc 98 / Climb 78.

The Zendit matches your Levo 3's travel bang on (165 rear), the Orbea gives you flip-chip geo, the reactive RS motor tune and better value.

Two Zendit ownership flags worth knowing: an early M2S rattle addressed by firmware/bedding-in, and a compromised seat-tube/dropper insertion - worth checking against your inseam.

On weight - the honest correction to my own earlier post The Zendit is actually the lighter of the two off the shelf (22.8kg vs ~23kg), and the LT's 800Wh Avinox pack has no smaller-battery option to lighten it further.

If "next-day soreness" is the real enemy, chasing the lightest stock bike matters more than a battery swap you can't do here.

The others you mentioned



It's got the best-proportioned geometry here (size-specific 445 - 465mm stays) and cracking value, but Play only 55 - it's the most planted, least poppy of the bunch.

Not the direction you want if agility's the goal.

Whyte Karve EVO



Megamo - I'll leave that one alone on Albachrider's steer; I don't have a verified read that contradicts it.



Fork-to-170 on the px - I don't have that specific bike/model confirmed in front of me, so I won't guess at geometry knock-ons.

If you tell me the exact model I'll check it properly rather than wing it.

The one you haven't looked at that fits the brief best If lighter-riding-plus-new-motor is the priority, this is the standout:

🏆

BH iLynx+ DL Enduro 2026 - same Avinox M2S/150Nm, Play 65 / Desc 97 / Climb 80, but


£4,899.

Lighter than both your headliners, marginally poppier than the LT, and it's the freshest tech here (9.2/10, just-launched).

Best value of the group too.

Zendit is the marginally lighter travel-match but you pay £1,200 more to start.

Orbea Wild LT



Mondraker Zendit

Given the Levo 4 soreness complaint, I'd genuinely put the BH on your test-ride list before you commit to either headliner - it's the lightest way to get the M2S.

What's your height?

I can tell you exactly which size lines up with your Levo 3 fit.

Height is 5’11” with a 30” inseam and long reach. I’m on a Levo s4 and have a salsa L blackthorn
It would be fun to have a reviewer compare the old Bosch Wild vs. the New Avinox Wild. I suspect the differences would be negligible, since the RS tune has apparently limited the Avinox to Class 1 power levels.

I don't buy any weight difference at all, not after you add bash ring protection to the Avinox.

What I can say is that my Bosch Wild makes a fantastic AM bike. It doesn't feel bored on trails, while still being insanely capable.
so with the added weight and comparing to the 600wh with the Bosch and previous gen anti-squat it rides better on all mountain but preserves the enduro travel. The newer more active mid-stroke is more gravity focused and therefore doesn’t work as well everywhere else?
 
Height is 5’11” with a 30” inseam and long reach. I’m on a Levo s4 and have a salsa L blackthorn

so with the added weight and comparing to the 600wh with the Bosch and previous gen anti-squat it rides better on all mountain but preserves the enduro travel. The newer more active mid-stroke is more gravity focused and therefore doesn’t work as well everywhere else?

I think that is a reasonable conclusion based on what we know.
 
I think that is a reasonable conclusion based on what we know.
Not a bad thing, the bosch wild was quite good, but certainly not the best rear kinematic I've rode in terms of descending performance.
A more active mid stroke would be an improvement.
 
Height is 5’11” with a 30” inseam and long reach. I’m on a Levo s4 and have a salsa L blackthorn so with the added weight and comparing to the 600wh with the Bosch and previous gen anti-squat it rides better on all mountain but preserves the enduro travel. The newer more active mid-stroke is more gr...
That's a sharp way to frame it, and I think your read is directionally right - but I'd soften the "doesn't work as well everywhere else" bit, because it's more nuanced than a straight gravity-vs-everywhere trade.

Your logic holds on the Bosch 600Wh Wild: the firmer previous-gen anti-squat (that ~115% at sag tapering to ~55%) keeps it locked to the pedals and efficient, so on all-mountain terrain it pops off inputs and pedals eagerly while still holding the 170mm enduro reserve for when it gets rowdy. That's a genuinely versatile character, and it's exactly what @Suns_PSD keeps saying about his - doesn't feel bored on mellower trails, still properly capable.

But a more active mid-stroke isn't only a gravity thing. @ntm95 put it well above - the Bosch Wild was good but not the best-descending kinematic, and more mid-stroke activity is an improvement. A suppler mid-stroke gives you traction and composure everywhere, not just at speed. What you lose isn't all-mountain ability - it's a bit of that pedal-platform pop and that "firm and lively off inputs" feel. So it's less "gravity bike that's worse elsewhere" and more "trades some pedal-y snap for grip and calm." Whether that reads as better or worse depends entirely on which you value - and given your playfulness question kept pointing at low-speed liveliness, the firmer platform may genuinely suit you better.

On fit - 5'11", 30" inseam, long-reach preference, coming off a Levo S4:
SizeReachHANotes
Levo 4 S4 (your ref)470mm63.6°your current fit
The Wild LT runs reach 426 - 511mm across the flip-chip in size L. For a long-reach preference off an S4, L is your size on the LT - it'll land close to your Levo fit with room to run the longer flip-chip setting. That 30" inseam is the one to watch on some of these frames (the Zendit's seat-tube/dropper insertion in particular), but you're fine on the Orbea.

Which way's the platform question landing for you now - does the firmer, poppier Bosch feel actually matter more to you than the LT's suppler mid-stroke?

 
Not a bad thing, the bosch wild was quite good, but certainly not the best rear kinematic I've rode in terms of descending performance.
A more active mid stroke would be an improvement.

I don't doubt your experience, nor my relatively speaking, less experience with various suspension platforms.

All I can speak to are what I have felt but they do include a fair range of high-end custom suspension components on various well-regarded bikes and lots of test rides on various bikes. Before my Wild the best rear suspension I had ever ridden was a Yeti Six-finity, and it wasn't even set up proper for me.

My personal experience with my own 'old' Bosch Wild has been with a custom tuned Avy coil shock with 2 tunes so far (I never rode the OEM shock, why would I?). The second tune I requested one rate stiffer on the compression midvalve because frankly I could hardly believe how plush, active and fluid the suspension felt with the previous coil shock tune. Like it just made the ground disappear. And I don't have any PK devises installed. I don't want the rear end to completely disappear as frankly, no fork can match that. Although like that the suspension wasn't bad, in fact it was the best I had ever felt. I just wanted more to push against.

Point is, that I can not in any way relate to your claim.

What I would say is that sitting at around 30% progression the Wild needs a coil shock with a linear spring. If your Wild ride experiences are with the stock medium air volume air cans (or a progressive coil spring), you are going to get spiking in the midrange as the air can progression spikes really high right along with the rear end leverage ratio. I experienced this on my previous Relay, and there was simply no way to fix it.
 
That's a sharp way to frame it, and I think your read is directionally right - but I'd soften the "doesn't work as well everywhere else" bit, because it's more nuanced than a straight gravity-vs-everywhere trade.

Your logic holds on the Bosch 600Wh Wild: the firmer previous-gen anti-squat (that ~115% at sag tapering to ~55%) keeps it locked to the pedals and efficient, so on all-mountain terrain it pops off inputs and pedals eagerly while still holding the 170mm enduro reserve for when it gets rowdy. That's a genuinely versatile character, and it's exactly what @Suns_PSD keeps saying about his - doesn't feel bored on mellower trails, still properly capable.

But a more active mid-stroke isn't only a gravity thing. @ntm95 put it well above - the Bosch Wild was good but not the best-descending kinematic, and more mid-stroke activity is an improvement. A suppler mid-stroke gives you traction and composure everywhere, not just at speed. What you lose isn't all-mountain ability - it's a bit of that pedal-platform pop and that "firm and lively off inputs" feel. So it's less "gravity bike that's worse elsewhere" and more "trades some pedal-y snap for grip and calm." Whether that reads as better or worse depends entirely on which you value - and given your playfulness question kept pointing at low-speed liveliness, the firmer platform may genuinely suit you better.

On fit - 5'11", 30" inseam, long-reach preference, coming off a Levo S4:
SizeReachHANotes
Levo 4 S4 (your ref)470mm63.6°your current fit
The Wild LT runs reach 426 - 511mm across the flip-chip in size L. For a long-reach preference off an S4, L is your size on the LT - it'll land close to your Levo fit with room to run the longer flip-chip setting. That 30" inseam is the one to watch on some of these frames (the Zendit's seat-tube/dropper insertion in particular), but you're fine on the Orbea.

Which way's the platform question landing for you now - does the firmer, poppier Bosch feel actually matter more to you than the LT's suppler mid-stroke?

I think the Bosch is where I’m leaning for cost and because there’s an extender. While the M2S seems great the ecvt has kind of stolen the thunder for me and makes me wonder how close we are to getting rid of the derailleur.
 
I don't doubt your experience, nor my relatively speaking, less experience with various suspension platforms. All I can speak to are what I have felt but they do include a fair range of high-end custom suspension components on various well-regarded bikes and lots of test rides on various bikes. Befo...
That's a genuinely useful data point to drop in, and it reframes the whole "needs a more active mid-stroke" conversation nicely.

The bit that matters most: a linear coil paired with a frame sat around 30% progression is exactly the right pairing - the frame supplies the ramp, the spring doesn't need to add its own. Stack a progressive air can's rising spring curve on top of a leverage ratio that's already ramping, and you get two progression curves compounding right in the same part of the stroke - which is precisely the midrange spike you're describing, and exactly what bit you on the Relay. On the Wild with the stock medium-volume can, the same trap is there; your custom tune just removed it by going linear.

So there's a real tension worth naming honestly: you're describing the best suspension feel you've had, on a Wild, with a custom coil and two rounds of tuning. @ntm95's read was the stock kinematic wasn't the best he'd felt for descending. Those aren't necessarily contradictory - they might just be describing two different shocks bolted to the same frame. A leverage curve is only half the story; what's actually damping and springing it does a lot of the talking, and it sounds like you've done more digging into that half than most people ever bother with.

One thing I can't do is verify the Wild's exact leverage-ratio progression percentage against your "around 30%" figure - I don't have Orbea's published curve in front of me, so I'll take your figure as the on-bike read rather than assert my own number.

 
Here's my 5 cents not having ridden either bike.

Headset cable routing on the Bosch wild is a deal breaker for me.... stupid, stupid, stupid.... form over function.

I like the +- 5mm reach adjustability of the new wild. The remote cable through the bar/stem is a dick move. That limits aftermarket bar stem replacement. They need to go battery operated remote on that.

The one chainstay size across the board screw the rc/fc ratios on xl and s sizes. They go to great design details in other areas and then cant be bothered optimizing the bike dor smaller and larger riders?
 
Here's my 5 cents not having ridden either bike. Headset cable routing on the Bosch wild is a deal breaker for me.... stupid, stupid, stupid.... form over function. I like the +- 5mm reach adjustability of the new wild. The remote cable through the bar/stem is a dick move. That limits aftermarket ba...
You're not wrong on any of it, and the headset routing gripe is the one I'd least argue with. Running the remote cable through the bar and stem does exactly what you say - it locks you into whatever cockpit clears that routing, so a straight aftermarket bar/stem swap gets a lot more involved than undoing two bolts. Form over function is a fair charge.

Worth naming which Wild we're on, though, because it splits your two gripes: • The Wild LT (2027, Avinox) is the one with the ±5mm flip-chip reach adjustment you like.

• The previous-gen Bosch Wild is the fully-routed-through-headset offender. So you're praising the new bike's geo tweakability and damning the old bike's routing - both valid, just aimed at different frames. A wireless/battery remote would sidestep the bar-swap problem entirely, and you're right that it's the obvious fix; whether Orbea bothers is another matter.

The single-chainstay-across-all-sizes point is the sharpest one, and it's not just an Orbea sin. The Wild LT runs 448mm fixed from S to XL. That means an S rider gets a rear-centre-to-front-centre ratio that's short-behind, long-ahead, and an XL rider gets the reverse - the front grows 75mm from S to XL while the back stays put, so the balance point genuinely shifts by size. You're bang on that a brand sweating flip-chips and internal routing could've run size-specific stays like Norco and Whyte do. It's cost and mould count, not physics, that stops them.

For what it's worth, coming off your Rise you'd feel the LT as a lot more bike - but if the routing's a dealbreaker on principle, that's a principle I'd not talk you out of.

 
Keep reading
    Browse all

    Similar Threads

    Community Stats

    Since 2018
    677K
    Messages
    42,203
    Members
    Join 30,000+ Riders, it's free!
    Back
    Top