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Where can I find compatible replacement spokes for the AMFlow PL Carbon Pro?

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The spokes are the known weak spot on these, so you're asking the right question before one lets go on a descent.

Here's what the community's worked out:

The stock rear spokes
@Winford found the factory rear spokes are too light and prone to breaking — effectively identical to DT Swiss Alpine 3 double-butted spokes. The catch: the specific Sapim spoke type Amflow fitted can't be sourced as a straight replacement anywhere except through Amflow themselves. So for a like-for-like factory replacement, you're going back to Amflow's own parts channel.

The better fix
Rather than replace weak with weak, @Winford relaced with Sapim Strong spokes and that solved the breakage entirely. That's the move most people on here end up making — it's a proper upgrade, not just a repair.

The lengths you'll need
For the Carbon Pro rear wheel, the cassette-side spokes are Sapim E-Light straightpull, 299mm. Worth noting these are straightpull, not J-bend — so whatever you or a wheelbuilder orders needs to match the hub. If you're going the Sapim Strong route, take the wheel (or the exact spoke lengths for both sides, non-drive included) to a decent wheelbuilder and let them measure rather than guessing from one figure.

Where to actually buy
Any Sapim stockist — J&L Wheels, Strada Wheels, or your local wheelbuilder can order Sapim Strong / E-Light straightpulls cut to length. That's the practical route for the upgrade.
Amflow directly — the only source for the exact factory Sapim replacements if you want stock-for-stock.

One thing worth doing regardless: after any wheel work these need re-tensioning as they bed in — @Astro66 found the spokes needed re-tensioning again after a couple of hundred km, so it's not quite fit-and-forget.

If you tell me whether it's a spoke that's actually broken (and which side) or you're just getting ahead of it, and whether you're on the stock carbon wheels or an aftermarket set, I can narrow the exact lengths and count for you.
 
Stock carbon wheel. 2 spokes broke, rear wheel, broke on the outer side of the spoke. It's the second time this happened
 
Stock carbon wheel. 2 spokes broke, rear wheel, broke on the outer side of the spoke. It's the second time this happened
 
Stock carbon wheel. 2 spokes broke, rear wheel, broke on the outer side of the spoke. It's the second time this happened
Second time round on the same failure mode is data, not bad luck - that's the factory Sapim spokes telling you they've had enough. Breaking on the outer (non-drive) side is consistent with what's been reported elsewhere on this bike.

Given it's now happened twice, I wouldn't just replace like-for-like again - you'll likely be back here in a few months. Worth reading @paulsarg's experience:

"I have an Amflow PL pro carbon and have now snapped a total of 6 spokes at the nipple on the rear."

Six spokes on one rider's bike is well past coincidence - this is a known, repeated failure pattern on the stock rear wheel, not a one-off.

So for you specifically: Don't just replace the two broken ones stock-for-stock - get the whole rear wheel relaced with Sapim Strong spokes (2.0/2.4mm), as I mentioned in my last post. Patching two spokes back in with the same weak Sapim spec just sets you up for round three.

Nipples - insist on brass, not alloy, when it's relaced. Alloy nipples on a wheel that's already shown it's under-tensioned/stressed are a false economy - they round off and fail before the spokes do.

Get it properly assessed - with two breaks and it being a repeat failure, it's worth flagging to Amflow as a warranty case rather than just quietly fixing it yourself, especially since you're clearly not the only one seeing this.

Take the wheel to a wheelbuilder (or a Sapim stockist like J&L Wheels or Strada Wheels) and get them to check spoke tension all round while they're at it - a wheel that's already broken two spokes has probably gone out of true and needs a proper once-over, not just two spokes swapped and forgotten.

 
Stock carbon wheel. 2 spokes broke, rear wheel, broke on the outer side of the spoke. It's the second time this happened
Think that one posted twice, @ZappaZ - forum having a moment, not your bike doubling its spoke count (small mercies).

Nothing to add to what I said above: two breaks on the outer side, second occurrence, means a full reface with Sapim Strong and brass nipples rather than a spot-repair, and it's worth pushing Amflow for a warranty conversation given how many others are reporting the same failure. Let me know what the wheelbuilder finds on tension/trueness once it's off the bike - useful data point for anyone else who lands in this thread with the same problem.

 
Measure length and thickness of the spike you need an you can buy it here Bicycle Spokes – The Largest Stock Worldwide Can Be Found Here!
Thanks for the link, @borysgo2 - decent shout for a general spoke source, and worth flagging for anyone in this thread. Quick caveat though: that page doesn't list AMFlow compatibility specifically, so whoever orders needs to nail down two things before typing a card number:

Bend type - the AMFlow PL Carbon Pro rear hub is straight-pull, not J-bend, so half the catalogue on that site is the wrong fitting.

Length - the figure I've already got for the cassette-side rear is Sapim E-Light straight-pull, 299mm; non-drive side needs measuring separately rather than assumed, since it's rarely identical on a boost-spaced rear.

Given you build your own wheels and dish/true without a stand, you'll know better than most that "measure and match gauge" is right in principle but on a straight-pull hub with a proprietary flange offset, guessing off a spoke ruler is exactly how you end up re-ordering. Worth @ZappaZ ringing wheel-parts.shop with the exact AMFlow hub flange dimensions (or the broken spoke in hand) before committing - their B2B line should be able to confirm straight-pull Sapim stock at that length.

 
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