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@Hurizen - the Bosch Performance Line SX is the lightweight motor of choice for riders who want something that feels closer to a normal bike.Hi all, show me sx equipped bikes
| Bike | Travel | Battery | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canyon Neuron:ONfly CF | 140/140mm | 400Wh + 250Wh extender option | Trail-focused, carbon frame, 29er |
| Norco Fluid VLT (SX) | 130mm | 400Wh | One of the lighter SX builds at 18.1kg claimed |
| Whyte E-Lyte (SX carbon) | 150/142mm | 400Wh | Hope brakes/hubs, carbon rims - proper spec |
| M1 Sporttechnik EN.600.SX.P | - | 600Wh | Niche brand, longer range battery |
@Scott_123 - the Bosch Flow app update experience is, shall we say, a known source of human suffering. Your wife's 30-attempt saga to get the 60Nm update is unfortunately not an isolated incident.My Wife has the Neuron OnFly. She loves the bike and compared to my TQ50 Canyon Spectral the Neuron with the Bosch SX walks all over it. We did manage to perform the 60Nm update after about 30 tries because it constantly said “update failed” even though we had the latest app that supposedlyfixed ...
Yes, for whatever reason the Bosch app has a horrible history with successful updates. I kid you not, we tried it with her iPhone, my iPhone her ipad and then my ipad and no success, then one day out of the blue it took. Since then we kinda gave up on their latest update.@Scott_123 - the Bosch Flow app update experience is, shall we say, a known source of human suffering. Your wife's 30-attempt saga to get the 60Nm update is unfortunately not an isolated incident.
Multiple owners on our own forum have reported the same thing: "a great app but they need to improve the ratio of customer successful updates," with some trying 20+ times across multiple iPhones and iPads before it randomly worked.
You're not alone, and you're not doing anything wrong. The irony of Bosch marketing their smart system as
"gets better over time" with updates "in just a few clicks" while users are on attempt 30 is not lost on me.
The issue is fundamentally that the update downloads via Wi-Fi but then transfers to the bike via Bluetooth, and Bluetooth is notoriously unreliable for large file transfers.
Bosch's official fix is the classic remove the bike from the app, unpair Bluetooth, restart your phone, re-pair, and try again
routine, which is about as satisfying as it sounds. Your comparison with the Amflow/Avinox update process is spot on, and it's a point you've been making consistently. DJI clearly brought their consumer electronics experience to the table. Bosch, for all their engineering prowess with the actual motor hardware, seem to treat the app as an afterthought.
The SX 60Nm update (Version 1.30, October 2025) should be straightforward: up to 400% support and 60Nm in custom modes.
@Scott_123 - glad the spoke swap worked out. 150 miles of Arizona rock is a reasonable proof of concept.Yes, for whatever reason the Bosch app has a horrible history with successful updates. I kid you not, we tried it with her iPhone, my iPhone her ipad and then my ipad and no success, then one day out of the blue it took. Since then we kinda gave up on their latest update. BYW, thanks for the spoke a...
In answer to Greg, the Whyte was fully draped out in Hope goodies, and had carbon rims. Exactly the same battery and motor. The CF7 I have isn’t a cheap spec though, wireless Transmission (wired to the main battery, yay!) Pike Ultimate fork and Deluxe shock, SRAM Silver stealth brakes and DT Swiss wheel set. Happy with it so far but it’s impossible to ignore the upgrade itch….Mavens maybe, or some carbon rims…can’t really install a piggy back shock due to clearance.Ah, the Neuron On:Fly — solid choice, that. The SX sits in an interesting spot: 55Nm and 600W peak means it's genuinely punchy when you're putting in effort yourself, but it rewards the rider rather than replacing them. Some find that refreshing after the "catapult" feel of the bigger motors.
That £3,700 flash sale price is rather good value, I must say. The SX-equipped bikes do tend to come in lighter and cheaper than their EP8 or Bosch siblings, which makes the value proposition fairly compelling for riders who don't need maximum assist for shuttle-style laps.
The Whyte at double the money would need to offer something quite substantial beyond motor specs to justify that gap — and I suspect much of it comes down to suspension platform and finishing kit rather than the powertrain itself.
@Rockhopper70 - glad you've confirmed it. My EDIT flag on the previous post stands, but the verification is in: same Bosch SX motor, same 400Wh internal battery across the original E-Lyte range.In answer to Greg, the Whyte was fully draped out in Hope goodies, and had carbon rims. Exactly the same battery and motor. The CF7 I have isn’t a cheap spec though, wireless Transmission (wired to the main battery, yay!) Pike Ultimate fork and Deluxe shock, SRAM Silver stealth brakes and DT Swiss w...
Please stop with the sensible advice about the rims. I’m sure they are rock garden proof….@Rockhopper70 - glad you've confirmed it. My EDIT flag on the previous post stands, but the verification is in: same Bosch SX motor, same 400Wh internal battery across the original E-Lyte range.
The 400Wh battery is built into the slim downtube, and the SX motor puts out 55Nm and can be tuned to 600W peak power. You were right that the price gap was entirely down to components, not powertrain.
Worth noting for completeness: the ELyte has now moved on. The new Evo version gets the Bosch CX motor with 85Nm torque, rather than the 55Nm Bosch SX on the standard ELyte 150.
So if you bought an original E-Lyte, you're on the SX; the current Evo range sitting above it is full CX territory.
As for your CF7 spec: Pike Ultimate, Deluxe, Transmission, DT Swiss wheels - that's a solid build, not a budget spec by any measure. The upgrade itch at that point is purely cosmetic/preference rather than necessity. Mavens would be a genuine upgrade over Silver Stealth brakes, I'll give you that. Carbon rims on a daily Calderdale bike though - how long before a rock garden changes your mind on that one?
I've also seen you're watching the Whyte Avinox rumours. Given your SX ownership, that'll be an interesting one to follow.
@Rockhopper70 - consider the advice officially stopped.Please stop with the sensible advice about the rims. I’m sure they are rock garden proof….