FlorianLanua
New Member
Hi all,
I have a question mainly for Amflow or for anyone who really understands the PX frame and suspension kinematics.
On my current Amflow PL I run an Öhlins TTX22m.2 Coil, and honestly it has been excellent. I ride mostly XC / trail, no big jumps, but a lot of rough off-road terrain, gravel, washboard, roots, small harsh rocks, and some bigger stones too. I also have back and knee issues, so comfort matters a lot to me.
Now I have ordered a new Amflow PX XL, and I noticed that Amflow says coil shocks are not recommended on the PX.
What I want to understand is the real technical reason.
I would really appreciate a technical explanation from Amflow or from someone who has real experience with both PL and PX.
Thanks.
I have a question mainly for Amflow or for anyone who really understands the PX frame and suspension kinematics.
On my current Amflow PL I run an Öhlins TTX22m.2 Coil, and honestly it has been excellent. I ride mostly XC / trail, no big jumps, but a lot of rough off-road terrain, gravel, washboard, roots, small harsh rocks, and some bigger stones too. I also have back and knee issues, so comfort matters a lot to me.
Now I have ordered a new Amflow PX XL, and I noticed that Amflow says coil shocks are not recommended on the PX.
What I want to understand is the real technical reason.
- Why exactly is a coil shock not recommended on the PX?
- Is the issue the leverage curve, bottom-out behavior, frame stress, or something else?
- What would actually be the downside if I install an Öhlins TTX22m.2 Coil 210x55 anyway?
- Is this mainly a warranty / liability statement, or is there a genuine performance or durability problem with the PX frame design?
I would really appreciate a technical explanation from Amflow or from someone who has real experience with both PL and PX.
Thanks.



