Which is more reliable, Bosch Performance Line CX Gen 5 motor or Giant SyncDrive Sport 2, 75Nm
Right then,
@apswoodwork - the eternal question. Let me actually give you a straight answer rather than the usual "it depends" dodge.
Bosch CX Gen 5 is the more reliable motor. Full stop.
Here's why, with the receipts:
Giant SyncDrive Sport 2 - what it is
First, a note on specs. The SyncDrive Sport 2 is a compact motor with Smart Assist technology, sonically tuned for smooth, quiet performance.
It produces up to 75Nm of torque - which is actually a step up from the older SyncDrive Sport (70Nm). It's worth knowing that the motors are manufactured by Yamaha, while Giant add the finishing touches with some in-house solutions.
On reliability - the honest picture Our own forum has some illuminating data on this. The failure breakdown for Yamaha-based motors (which the SyncDrive Sport is) makes for interesting reading:
Yamaha PW & PW-SE (Giant SyncDrive Sport): 70% water ingress, 15% PCB failure, 10% plastic drive gear failure, 5% other.
Water ingress being the dominant failure mode is a consistent theme across most motor brands, but the PCB failure rate is a concern specific to the Yamaha platform.
The broader failure rate data collected from the community also puts things in perspective: Bosch Gen 4 came in at under 2% failure rate, while Shimano E8000/Yamaha/Brose 1.3 grouped together at under 7%.
Yamaha and Bosch Gen 4 aren't in the same ballpark - Bosch wins comfortably on raw failure rates.
Service network - a big deal
Early battery disconnect issues on Yamaha appear to have largely been solved by recent firmware updates, though it can still be stubborn about turning on or off. There are also fewer Yamaha service centres than there are for Bosch, Shimano or Specialized.
If you're in a rural part of the UK, that matters enormously when something goes wrong. The Bosch Performance Line CX is one of the most reliable units on the market
- and that reputation is backed by the largest dealer network in Europe.
The Bosch CX Gen 5 now
Worth noting that the Gen 5 has had its OTA power update (May 2025), so it's now sitting at 100Nm / 750W.
The Gen 5 CX motors deliver up to 100Nm of torque and 750W peak power - up from the previous 85Nm and 600W - offering up to 400% support, which should help tackle technical and steep terrain even more easily.
The cadence behaviour is also class-leading - the Bosch CX Gen 5 is the most cadence-independent motor tested, delivering flat power from 50 - 100+rpm, whereas the Yamaha-based motors are known to be stronger at lower cadences but less consistent overall.
Bottom line
| Factor | Bosch CX Gen 5 | Giant SyncDrive Sport 2 |
|---|
| Torque | 100Nm | 75Nm |
| Failure rate | <2% (Gen 4 data) | ~7% (Yamaha group) |
| Main failure mode | Water ingress | Water ingress + PCB |
| Service network | Excellent (UK-wide) | Limited |
| Cadence range | Flat 50 - 100+rpm | Better at low cadence |
| Motor character | Smooth, refined | Strong low-end punch |
The SyncDrive Sport 2 isn't a bad motor - it's solid, punchy at low cadences, and the 75Nm is decent. But if reliability is your
primary criterion (as your thread title suggests), the Bosch wins on failure rates, wins on service network, and wins on long-term peace of mind.
The relevant reliability thread is worth a browse:
https://www.emtbforums.com/threads/36478/