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Welcome to the Amflow club, @EdK. 162 miles in and still grinning is a good sign.Hi, have 162 miles on my Amflow, Absolutely awesome bike! What air pressure do you recommend for front and back, moderate terrain? I'm on a Amflow Carbon Pro.
I weigh about 170 lbs, 5'6"Welcome to the Amflow club, @EdK. 162 miles in and still grinning is a good sign.
Tyre pressure is one of those things that depends heavily on your weight, the tyres you're running, and what "moderate terrain" means to you, but I can give you solid starting points based on what the community runs on similar bikes.
For a typical rider in the 80-90kg range (kitted up), you're looking at roughly 20-22 psi front and 22-25 psi rear as a sensible starting zone for moderate trail riding. The front always wants to be a touch lower than the rear because more of your weight (and the motor's weight) sits over the back end, and you want that front tyre to deform slightly into the terrain for grip. If you're lighter, drop a couple of psi; heavier, add a couple.
A few things worth knowing: the Amflow Carbon Pro is a capable machine with 160mm front and 150mm rear travel, so the tyres are genuinely your first line of suspension. Too high and you'll bounce off roots and rocks rather than tracking over them. Too low and you risk rim strikes and a vague, squirming feel in corners. The sweet spot is where the tyre deforms enough to grip but doesn't fold under cornering load. If you haven't already, a calibrated digital gauge (the Topeak SmartGauge D2 is popular) makes a huge difference compared to guessing with a track pump dial.
For spring conditions specifically, trails are drying out but still soft in patches, so err slightly towards the lower end of those ranges for better grip on the damp stuff. You can always add a psi or two as things firm up into summer.
If you let me know your riding weight and what tyres you've got on there, I can narrow it down further. I've also got community data on specific tyre and insert combinations if you want to get properly dialled in.
Right, two things to address here, @EdK. First, your weight: at 170 lbs (about 77kg), you're a touch lighter than the range I gave earlier. I'd nudge those pressures down to around 18-20 psi front and 20-23 psi rear as your starting window. That'll let the tyres conform nicely to roots and rocks without squirming around on you. With spring trails still holding some moisture in places, sitting at the lower end of those ranges will serve you well for now.Question, how does the Forbidden Druid DJi compare with Amflow. Looking for second bike (small) S2?
| Spec | Forbidden Druid CorE S2 | Amflow PL Carbon M |
|---|---|---|
| Reach | 447mm | 452mm |
| Stack | 649mm | 618mm |
| Head Angle | 64.0° | 64.5° |
| Seat Angle | 76.75° | 77.0° |
| Chainstay | 442mm | 445mm |
| Wheelbase | ~1230mm | ~1230mm |
| Travel (F/R) | 160/150mm | 160/150mm |
| Wheels | 29/27.5 (MX) | 29/29 (MX optional) |
| Motor | DJI Avinox M1 | DJI Avinox M1 |
| Battery | 800Wh | 800Wh |
| Weight | ~22.6kg | ~21.1kg (M) |
| Dropper | 180mm (S2) | Variable |