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Taming the Unrideable: How a Long-Travel eMTB Turns Nightmare Trails into Playgrounds

AMFLOW
-
15/05/2026

You know the section. Every local trail has one. The kind of line that gets described in the car park with hand gestures — "it drops off here, then there's this shelf, then the rocks go left but you actually go right" — and where half the riders in the group quietly decide they'll walk it when the moment comes.

Nobody admits it on the way up. But you can tell. The pace slows. Conversations start about "having a look first." And then, when it matters, some bikes flow through it and some bikes fight it. The difference almost never comes down to the rider's legs. It comes down to what the bike was built to handle.

That's the gap a long-travel eMTB fills. Not by making hard trails soft — that's not the point, and if it were, you'd be riding a different sport. But by matching your machine to the terrain so that the trail stays the challenge it's supposed to be, instead of becoming the thing that beats you before the real riding starts.

Long-travel suspension has always existed. What's changed is what happens when you pair it with a motor that produces the kind of torque that used to live only in downhill race bikes — and then asks it to climb too. The old trade-off between descending machine and climbing anchor is largely gone. What's left is something genuinely different: a bike that goes hard on the way down and doesn't apologise on the way up.

This guide explains how that works, who it's actually built for, what to look for when you're choosing, and which machines in 2026 are making the most of it.

What "Long Travel"Actually Means — And What It Does on the Trail

Here's the thing about suspension travel numbers: they sound like spec sheet trivia until you're mid-descent and your front wheel disappears into a hole you didn't see, and whether or not you stay upright has everything to do with how much travel your fork had left to give.

Travel is the total distance a fork or rear shock can compress before it runs out of room. More travel means more capacity to absorb impacts before the bike transfers them to you — but it also changes the geometry of the entire machine. And that geometry change is where things get interesting.
Category
Front travel
Rear travel
Best for
Short travel / XC
80–120mm
80–120mm
Smooth trails, speed on climbs
Trail
120–140mm
115–135mm
Mixed terrain, general riding
All-mountain
140–160mm
130–150mm
Technical climbs and descents
Long travel / Enduro
160–180mm
150–170mm
Technical descents, big hits
Downhill
180mm+
180mm+
Purpose-built gravity only


The travel number is just the entry point. What really changes is the geometry that comes with it: a slacker head tube angle (typically 63–65°) puts the fork more horizontal, increasing high-speed stability. A lower bottom bracket drops the rider's centre of gravity into corners. A longer wheelbase spreads the bike's footprint, making it resist the tendency to pitch over the bars on steep terrain.

Together, these changes create a bike that wants to go fast in places where shorter-travel bikes start to feel desperate. For a deeper look at how eMTB suspension setup works across different travel ranges, our full guide covers sag, rebound, and tuning for different terrain types.

Why the motor changes the long-travel equation entirely

The traditional argument against long-travel bikes was always the climbs. A 65° head tube angle and a slack, low geometry is magnificent pointed downhill and genuinely unpleasant pointed uphill. Riders tolerated it for the descents.

A mid-drive torque-sensing motor removes that calculation. When 150Nm of torque is available on demand, the geometric inefficiency of a slack climbing position becomes irrelevant — the motor fills the gap that the geometry creates. You descend on a machine built for the terrain. You climb on a machine assisted by an engine that doesn't care about your head tube angle.

This is the fundamental shift that makes long-travel eMTBs a genuinely new category, not just heavier versions of enduro bikes. For more on how eMTB motors perform across different riding scenarios, the detail is worth understanding before you buy.

Where a Long-Travel eMTB Comes Alive — Five Scenarios That Change Everything

Numbers explain what a long-travel eMTB is. Scenarios explain why you'd want one. These are the situations where the extra travel, the slacker geometry, and the powerful motor stop being abstract advantages and start being the reason you're grinning instead of walking.

1. The rock garden that used to end your flow

Rock gardens are the great divider between bikes. A trail bike with 130mm of travel can handle a rock garden — carefully, deliberately, picking a line and committing to it before the entry. A long-travel eMTB with 165mm front and 155mm rear approaches the same section with a different mindset entirely. You don't pick a line through it. You point it in roughly the right direction, let the suspension do its job, and come out the other side faster than you went in.

The difference isn't technique. It's that the bike has enough travel to absorb the irregular hits without transmitting them as body-rattling crashes. Your wheels stay on the ground — or close enough to it — and traction does the rest. That's the moment a rock garden stops being a feature you manage and starts being a feature you enjoy.

2. The steep, loose chute you've been side-eyeing for months

There are sections on every trail system where speed is actually safer than caution — where committing to the line is the only line that works, and any hesitation creates the exact problem you were trying to avoid. These sections reward bikes that stay planted, stable, and predictable at speed, not bikes that demand constant micro-corrections to stay in control.

Long travel does this through geometry. That lower BB means your hips drop into the bike rather than perching above it. The longer wheelbase means the front end doesn't want to tuck under load. The slacker head angle means the fork is pointing at the trail rather than into it. On a steep, loose chute, these aren't incremental improvements — they're the difference between a section you ride and a section you survive.

3. A full enduro loop — climbs included

This is where the eMTB part of long-travel eMTB earns its keep. A conventional long-travel enduro bike on a full loop — multiple descents, multiple climbs, a day's worth of elevation — asks a lot of its rider on the way up. The geometry that makes descents brilliant makes climbs laborious. You manage the climbs to get to the descents.

A long-travel eMTB doesn't work like that. The climbs are fast, efficient, and don't deplete you before you reach the top. Which means you arrive at the descent not half-spent, but ready — legs fresh, focus intact, able to ride the descent the way it was meant to be ridden rather than just surviving it. Pair that with a large-capacity battery and the ability to do it again in the afternoon, and a single long-travel eMTB turns a half-day ride into a full-day adventure. Our guide on making the most of full-day eMTB adventures covers how to plan routes around this kind of riding.

4. Bad weather, worse trail conditions

Long-travel eMTBs aren't just for summer. In fact, some of the best arguments for long travel emerge in autumn and winter, when the trails are wet, loose, and unpredictable. Wet roots are slippery in a way that geometry and travel can't fully fix — but they can make a significant difference to how a slip feels: manageable or consequential.

More travel means more compliance over terrain that changes rapidly. A bike that absorbs a slippery root mid-corner without stepping out keeps you upright in situations where a stiffer, shorter-travel bike would have already decided the outcome for you. Add wider tires, lower pressures, and the sustained traction that comes from a heavy, planted platform, and a long-travel eMTB in autumn mud is considerably more fun than most bikes have any right to be. For how to set up and maintain a long-travel eMTB through winter conditions, our winter riding guide covers the specifics.

5. Pushing your ceiling — the sections you've always walked

Every rider has a ceiling. The sections beyond it get walked, not ridden — not because the rider is incapable, but because they've correctly assessed that their current bike isn't the right tool for the job. A long-travel eMTB raises that ceiling meaningfully. Not by making hard things easy, but by making the bike's capability closer to the rider's potential.

The sections that felt consequential on a 130mm trail bike start to feel manageable on 165mm of travel with a motor that makes the run-up effortless. That shift in confidence — backed by a bike that can actually deliver on it — is how riding gets better. Not from the gym. From having the right machine for the terrain you want to ride. For riders working on developing their technical skills alongside upgrading their equipment, our guide on enhancing eMTB riding skills is worth reading alongside this one.

The Real Advantages of Long-Travel eMTBs — Beyond the Marketing Claims

Long travel gets talked about in terms of specs. The actual advantages show up in how a ride feels — and how you feel at the end of one. Here's what genuinely changes when you move to more travel.

Confidence that compounds

The biggest advantage of a long-travel eMTB isn't measurable in a lab. It's the confidence that comes from knowing your bike has more capability than the trail is currently demanding. When you know the suspension has headroom left — when you know the bike won't run out of travel before the section runs out of roughness — you ride more aggressively, more fluidly, more the way the trail was designed to be ridden.

That confidence isn't recklessness. It's the product of riding a machine that matches the terrain, which creates a positive feedback loop: you ride better, which builds skill, which pushes your ceiling upward, which makes the next harder section feel like the current one did six months ago.

Traction where it matters most

More suspension travel means wheels spend more time on the ground. That's not a minor detail — it's the difference between a corner you carve and a corner you slide through, between a rock garden you flow and one you bounce across. Long-travel suspension follows irregular terrain more closely, maintaining contact through compressions and drops that would briefly lift a shorter-travel wheel.

On an eMTB, that traction benefit is amplified by the motor's torque. With 150Nm available instantly, wheelspin on loose climbs is a real possibility — but only if the rear wheel loses contact. A well-tuned long-travel suspension keeps the rear wheel working even on technical, irregular ground, letting the motor deliver its power where it's useful rather than spinning it into the air.

Fatigue — less of it, later

This one surprises riders who haven't experienced it. Long-travel suspension absorbs impacts before they reach your body. Over a two-hour technical descent, the difference between 130mm and 165mm of travel is significant — not in individual hits, which feel comparable, but in cumulative load on your arms, shoulders, and core. Shorter-travel bikes require constant active absorption from the rider. Long-travel bikes do more of that work mechanically.

The result is that you arrive at the bottom of a long descent less physically depleted — and on an eMTB, less mentally depleted too, because you've been riding rather than bracing. Which matters enormously when there's another descent after the next climb.

Versatility that most riders underestimate

There's a persistent myth that long-travel bikes are one-trick ponies — brilliant downhill, useless anywhere else. In the eMTB context, that myth collapses. The motor handles the climbing penalty. Adjustable geometry handles the terrain variation. A long-travel eMTB configured with a slightly steeper head tube angle and higher BB is a capable all-mountain bike. Configure it at the other end of the adjustment range and it's an aggressive enduro machine. The same bike, the same day, the same rider — just a different set of bolts in different positions.

This versatility is genuinely new. It didn't exist in the pre-motor, pre-adjustable-geometry era. It's one of the reasons long-travel eMTBs are becoming the default choice for riders who take their terrain seriously rather than a specialist category for gravity-only riders. For a broader view of how eMTBs are reshaping what's possible on the trail, that shift is well documented.

The freedom to ride more trail in less time

A long-travel eMTB doesn't just change how you ride a trail. It changes how much trail you can ride in a session. With a motor handling the climbs efficiently and suspension handling the descents confidently, the ratio of time-on-trail to time-spent-recovering shifts dramatically. You link more sections. You do the loop twice instead of once. You add the extra ridge that you always thought was too far to be worth it.

That's not about being lazy or cheating the effort. It's about spending your time and energy on the parts of riding that matter to you — the technical, engaging, genuinely rewarding sections — rather than on grinding climbs that eat your legs before you reach them. The motor makes the connective tissue of a big day in the mountains feel like the warmup it should be.

Is a Long-Travel eMTB Right for You?

Honest answer: it depends on the trails you actually ride, not the trails you describe when someone asks what kind of riding you do.

Most riders overstate the technicality of their terrain when talking about it and understate it when choosing a bike. Long travel is genuinely the right tool for specific conditions — not a universal upgrade, and not something to buy because the numbers sound impressive.

Long travel makes sense if:

  • Technical singletrack — rock gardens, rooted chutes, sustained steeps — makes up the majority of your riding
  • You're riding enduro-style routes where descents are the main event and climbs are the necessary evil between them
  • You regularly find yourself muscling through sections rather than flowing through them
  • You want to start pushing into terrain that currently sits beyond your bike's capability

  • Long travel may not be the right call if:

  • Your local trails are primarily smooth flow trails or XC-style terrain
  • You do significant road or gravel linking between trail sections
  • Maximum climbing efficiency matters more than descending confidence

  • If you're still working out where you sit on the all-mountain vs enduro spectrum, that guide lays out the decision clearly. Long travel sits at the enduro end — it's the right tool for specific terrain, not a universal upgrade.

    What Separates a Great Long-Travel eMTB from a Good One

    Suspension quality — the travel number is the floor, not the ceiling

    A bike with 160mm of travel and mediocre damping will feel worse than a bike with 150mm and premium, brand-tuned suspension. What matters after the travel number is how that travel is controlled — how quickly the shock recovers after a hit, how progressive the spring curve feels as you load into a turn, and whether the suspension was set up generically or tuned specifically for that frame.

    The best long-travel eMTBs in 2026 feature suspension tuned in partnership with the fork and shock manufacturers — not simply specced from a catalogue.

    Adjustable geometry — no longer a premium feature

    The most technically capable long-travel eMTBs now offer multi-position geometry adjustment: head tube angle, bottom bracket height, and chainstay length can each be changed without specialist tools. This matters because "long travel" covers a range of terrain — a bike that can shift between a moderate all-mountain setup and an aggressive enduro configuration is genuinely two bikes in one.

    Understanding how eMTB geometry numbers translate to real-world riding feel is worth the time before you commit to a purchase.

    Motor torque and battery — enduro terrain is demanding

    Technical riding consumes battery faster than smooth trail riding. Repeated punchy climbs between technical sections, sustained low-speed torque through rock gardens, and the sheer weight of a long-travel platform all draw more current than a relaxed trail ride. A smaller battery that works well on flow trails will leave you short on a full-day enduro loop.

    For long-travel riding specifically, 700Wh is a practical minimum. And for riders who want to do back-to-back long days, the ability to swap or independently charge a battery without bringing the whole bike inside is no longer a gimmick — it's a genuine operational advantage.

    The Amflow Lineup — Matched to the Trail You Actually Ride

    There are a lot of long-travel eMTBs in 2026. Most of them are competent. A smaller number are genuinely interesting. What puts a bike in the second category isn't just the travel number or the motor spec — it's whether the whole system was built with a coherent philosophy, or assembled from whatever parts were available at a given price point.

    Amflow builds three bikes. Each one targets a specific rider with a specific set of demands. None of them exist to fill a gap in a product matrix — they exist because the riders who designed them had a clear answer to the question "what does this terrain actually need?"
    Amflow PL — The lightweight all-mountain platform

    The Amflow PL starts at 19.2kg on a 2.27kg carbon frame — a figure that still stands among the lightest full-power eMTBs available. The Avinox M1 motor produces 105Nm of continuous torque with a 120Nm Boost mode and 1,000W peak output. Battery options run to 800Wh with 157km of Eco range, charged to 75% in approximately 1.5 hours via the 508W GaN charger.

    The PL is the right choice for riders who want genuine all-mountain capability with the lowest possible weight — those for whom the climbing and the descending matter roughly equally, and for whom carrying 26kg up a mountain would subtract meaningfully from the experience.
    Amflow PX — Full power, full configurability ★ Revealed April 9, 2026

    The Amflow PX steps up to the Avinox M2S motor: 150Nm of torque, 1,500W peak power, and a 46% increase in power density over the M1. The carbon frame weighs 2.4kg; the complete bike starts from 20.6kg. A 700Wh custom battery cell pairs with the same 508W fast-charge system for 3× charging speed.

    Revealed on 9 April 2026 and now available in select markets worldwide. Visit the Amflow PX page to check availability in your country and order now.

    What defines the PX is its geometry system: 40 available combinations across five head tube angle positions, two bottom bracket heights, and four chainstay lengths. A rider who primarily does technical all-mountain can set the PX relatively neutral. A rider who wants to push into aggressive enduro territory can dial the head tube slacker, drop the BB, and lengthen the rear end — all without tools, in minutes.

    The PX also introduces 4G IoT connectivity alongside GPS, allowing real-time location tracking without Bluetooth proximity. Offline navigation via the Avinox Ride app supports GPX, FIT, and TCX route files. Smart heart-rate assist automatically adjusts motor output to keep the rider within a target heart rate zone — a feature that matters more on long, varied enduro days than on short trail sessions.
    Amflow PR — The long-travel enduro eMTB built for riders who never stop ★★ Feature bike

    Every serious enduro rider has had the same experience: two-thirds through a big day, the terrain is finally doing what you came for, and the battery indicator is doing what you hoped it wouldn't. You start managing your motor use instead of managing your line choice. The trail wins, not because it was too hard, but because the energy accounting caught up with you.

    The Amflow PR was designed around that specific problem. Not around making the battery bigger — though the 800Wh cell is substantial — but around making the battery something you can actually manage in the field.

    The PR solves this with Avinox's first removable battery — an 800Wh pack that slides out of the frame for independent charging. Bring the battery to the desk. Leave the bike in the van. Swap a fresh battery in before the second loop of the day. The operational difference for back-to-back enduro days is significant.

    The PR Carbon Pro runs the Avinox M2S motor (150Nm, 1,500W peak) — the same motor as the PX. The base PR Carbon uses the new Avinox M2. Both maintain the sub-45dBA noise floor that comes from the dual-mesh helical gear design, which matters on long days when motor noise compounds into fatigue.

    Security on a long-travel machine left at trailheads is a real concern. The PR integrates Apple Find My natively — no SIM card required — allowing the bike's location to be tracked through the standard Apple app at any point. The same 40-combination geometry system as the PX means the PR can be configured for aggressive enduro geometry or pulled back toward a more manageable all-mountain setup depending on the day's terrain.

    The PR runs the same mixed-wheel configuration as the PX: 29-inch front for rolling momentum and obstacle clearance, 27.5-inch rear for agility and tighter cornering response. Magura Gustav Pro hydraulic brakes with 203mm rotors provide the stopping power that long, fast descents require. The custom-tuned 2027 FOX rear shock is set up specifically for the PR's geometry and weight distribution — not pulled from a standard spec sheet.

    Revealed on 9 April 2026 and now available in select markets worldwide. Visit the Amflow PR page to check availability in your country and order now.

    The Trail Was Always There. Now You Have the Right Bike for It.

    Long-travel eMTBs didn't invent technical terrain. The rock gardens, the steep chutes, the consequence lines that separate a good day from a great one — those existed long before the motor arrived. What long travel with a powerful mid-drive does is remove the excuse. The bike is no longer the reason you walked a section, rode tentatively through another, or turned back before the trail got interesting.

    That shift is more significant than it sounds. When the machine stops being the limiting factor, you find out what your actual ceiling is — and it's almost always higher than the bike was letting you believe. That's the real value of matching your equipment to your terrain: not easier riding, but riding that finally reflects what you're actually capable of.

    The bikes worth looking at in 2026 are the ones that understand this. They're not just longer and slacker than last year's models — they're smarter about how they deliver power, more honest about geometry trade-offs, and better equipped for the reality of a full day in the mountains rather than a two-hour test loop. The long-travel eMTB category has finally grown into what it was always supposed to be.

    FAQs

    What is a long-travel eMTB?
    A long-travel eMTB is a full-suspension electric mountain bike with front fork travel of 160–180mm and rear suspension travel of 150–170mm. The longer travel allows the bike to absorb bigger impacts from technical terrain — rock gardens, drops, and sustained steep descents — while the electric motor compensates for the climbing inefficiency that long-travel geometry traditionally creates. The result is a bike that handles aggressive terrain without the enduro rider's usual compromise on the way back up.

    Is long travel good for climbing on an eMTB?
    Yes — and this is the core argument for long-travel eMTBs. On a conventional long-travel bike, the slack, low geometry that makes descents excellent creates real inefficiency on climbs. A mid-drive motor with 150Nm or more of torque fills that gap entirely. The motor doesn't care about your head tube angle. Long-travel eMTBs climb as well as most trail bikes because the motor compensates for what the geometry costs on the way up.

    What suspension travel do I need for enduro eMTB riding?
    For genuine enduro terrain — sustained technical descents, rock gardens, big drops, loose and steep singletrack — aim for 160mm front and 150mm rear as a starting point. Riders who push harder or ride more consequential terrain often prefer 170mm front. The rear travel number is generally 10–15mm less than the front on modern enduro geometry, which keeps the bike's balance point consistent across different types of hits.

    Can you use a long-travel eMTB on normal trails?
    Yes, with some caveats. A long-travel eMTB on smooth flow trails will feel planted and confident, but less efficient than a trail-geometry bike — the slack angles and lower BB aren't optimised for rolling speed on flat or gentle terrain. If your trails are mostly moderate, a long-travel bike will work but won't be in its element. If your trails mix moderate sections with genuinely technical terrain, a long-travel bike with adjustable geometry is the practical answer — configure it for the terrain you're on.

    What makes the Amflow PR Pro suited to technical terrain?
    The PR Pro combines the Avinox M2S motor's 150Nm torque with a removable 800Wh battery, 40-position adjustable geometry, mixed 29+27.5 wheels, and Magura Gustav Pro brakes with 203mm rotors. For enduro riding specifically, the removable battery solves the range problem on long technical days without requiring the rider to bring the whole bike indoors between sessions. The geometry system allows the bike to be configured for aggressive descending or pulled back for more moderate terrain.

    How does adjustable geometry help on a long-travel eMTB?
    Different terrain rewards different geometry configurations. A head tube angle of 63.5° suits fast, open enduro terrain where high-speed stability matters most. At 64.5° or 65°, the same bike climbs more efficiently and handles tighter, more technical switchbacks better. Adjustable geometry means one bike can cover both scenarios without compromise — dial it aggressive for race day, pull it back for a mixed-terrain all-day ride. On a long-travel platform, this flexibility meaningfully extends the range of trails the bike handles well.
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    Superlight Full-Power Electric Mountain Bike

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