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Bike Maintenance Checklist: Before, During & After Every Ride (2026)

AMFLOW
-
17/04/2026

Most bikes don't break down suddenly — they send signals for weeks. The clicking you've been ignoring? That's your drivetrain spending its savings. The slightly spongy brake lever you've adapted to? That's your stopping distance quietly growing.

This guide is structured around how you actually interact with your bike — before you leave, while you're riding, and when you return — not by component category or workshop manual order. By the time you finish reading, you'll know how to read every signal your bike sends, maintain it efficiently, and know exactly when to DIY versus when to book a workshop.

Part 1: Why Your Bike Is Trying to Talk to You

Here's something most guides won't tell you: a bike rarely fails without warning. Mechanical failures are almost always preceded by audible or tactile signals — days, sometimes weeks before anything actually breaks. The problem isn't that bikes are unreliable. It's that most riders haven't been taught how to listen.

Beyond safety, the financial case for maintenance is equally clear. A neglected chain stretches and accelerates cassette and chainring wear. A $20 chain replacement every 1,000 miles is vastly cheaper than the $150+ drivetrain overhaul that follows from ignoring it. Every component you protect through regular care directly extends the life of the components around it.

The good news: Once you know what to look, listen, and feel for, a pre-ride check takes under 2 minutes. A proper monthly service takes about 45 minutes — less than the time spent waiting for a workshop appointment after a roadside failure.

Part 2: How Often Does Your Bike Actually Need Attention?

The key is breaking maintenance into three distinct rhythms — the daily ritual, the monthly service, and the annual reckoning.
Task
Before Every Ride
Monthly
Seasonally
Annually
Tire pressure check




Brake lever feel test




Quick-release / thru-axle check




Chain lube & clean




Full brake system check




Frame & bolt inspection




Suspension service




Chain replacement (~1,000km)




Brake fluid replacement




Cable & housing replacement




Avinox battery health check (e-bike)




Avinox firmware update (e-bike)




PR removable battery slide-rail & lock inspection (Amflow PR only)




Spare battery contacts check (Amflow PX/PR with RS600)




Part 3: What Tools Do You Actually Need?

You don't need a full workshop. A focused, well-chosen toolkit covers 90% of home maintenance tasks.

  • Floor pump with pressure gauge — Accurate pressure is non-negotiable. A track pump is far superior to a hand pump for regular use.
  • Hex key set (2–10mm) — The backbone of every bike adjustment. Most bolts are M4–M8.
  • Chain cleaning tool + degreaser — Removes built-up grime without spreading it everywhere.
  • Chain lubricant — Dry wax lube for dry conditions; wet lube for wet/muddy riding. Never use WD-40 (see FAQ).
  • Chain wear indicator (chain checker) — A $10 tool that tells you exactly when to replace a $20 chain before it destroys a $100 cassette.
  • Torque wrench — Essential for carbon components. Over-tightening carbon seatposts or handlebars is a leading cause of frame damage.
  • Clean cloths and brushes — An old toothbrush for cassette cleaning; microfibre cloths for wiping down.

  • What you can skip buying (for now): a professional workstand, a spoke tension meter, and specialist cone spanners. Most modern bikes have sealed bearings, and wheel truing is best left to a shop.

    Phase 1: The Before-Every-Ride Ritual (2 Minutes)

    Before every ride · Zero tools required

    Every professional rider follows some version of this ritual before clipping in. It takes less time than adjusting your helmet, and it catches the issues that cause roadside failures and avoidable accidents. We've distilled it into the ABC Quick Check.

    Step 1: A — Air

    Squeeze both tires firmly. They should resist with significant force. A tire that yields noticeably under thumb pressure is underinflated. Road tires: 80–120 PSI; mountain/gravel tires: 20–40 PSI; e-bike tires (Amflow PL/PX/PR): typically 25–35 PSI depending on rider weight and terrain.

    Step 2: B — Brakes

    Squeeze each brake lever individually. It should feel firm well before reaching the handlebar. A lever that travels more than halfway before engaging signals air in hydraulic lines, worn pads, or cable stretch. Neither wheel should spin freely while you squeeze the brake.

    Step 3: C — Chain

    Give the chain a visual once-over. It should be lightly coated in lubricant — not dry and dull (needs lube), not black and gunky (needs cleaning). A well-maintained drivetrain shifts cleaner and lasts significantly longer. Visit Amflow Support for detailed drivetrain care guides.

    Step 4: The Stand-Over Test

    Straddle the bike and run through these in sequence:

    • Grip both ends of the handlebar and attempt to twist them independently. Any rotation indicates a loose stem clamp.
    • Apply the front brake and push the bike forward. A rocking or clicking sensation at the front indicates a loose headset.
    • Check that thru-axles or quick-release levers are fully closed and secure on both wheels.
    • For the Amflow PL: verify battery charge is sufficient and the Avinox system powers on correctly via the Avinox Ride app.
    • For the Amflow PR: check that the removable battery is fully seated and the lock mechanism is engaged before every ride.
    • For the Amflow PX: confirm the Avinox system powers on and IoT connectivity status shows correctly in the Avinox Ride app.

    Phase 2: On the Road — How to Read Your Bike's Signals

    While riding · No tools · Ears & hands only

    This is the section almost no guide covers — and it's arguably the most valuable. Your bike is communicating with you constantly while you ride. Learning to decode these signals lets you catch problems early, ride safely, and avoid expensive compounding damage.

    Step 5: Decode Your Bike's Sounds

    Sound
    When it happens
    Likely source
    Action
    Clicking
    Each pedal stroke
    Dry chain, loose pedal, worn bottom bracket
    Clean and lube chain first; if it persists, check pedal threads and BB
    Squealing
    Braking
    Contaminated brake pads or rotor
    Clean rotor with isopropyl alcohol; if pads are contaminated, replace them — don't ride on contaminated pads
    Creaking
    Standing climbs or sprints
    Seatpost (most common), headset, crank interface
    Remove seatpost, apply carbon paste or grease, reinsert at correct torque
    Grinding
    Pedalling, any gear
    Severely worn chain/cassette, damaged jockey wheel
    Stop riding — metal-on-metal grinding accelerates damage rapidly. Workshop visit required.
    Knocking / thud
    Rough terrain, repeated
    Loose bottle cage, mudguard bolt, or saddle rail
    Push/pull components one by one to locate; tighten the offending bolt
    Tick on climbs only
    High torque pedalling
    Chainring bolts, crank bolt
    Check chainring bolts (M5, 4–6Nm) with appropriate hex key
    Motor whine (e-bike)
    Engagement / acceleration
    Normal Avinox M1/M2S/M2 system operation
    Normal. If accompanied by OLED error codes, contact Amflow support.

    Step 6: Decode Your Bike's Feel

    Brakes feel soft or progressive: Hydraulic systems signal air in the fluid line. Mechanical systems signal cable stretch or pad wear. A hydraulic bleed or barrel adjuster turn is needed.
    Gears hesitate, skip, or refuse to shift: Start with the barrel adjuster (half-turn increments). If the chain skips under load, the chain or cassette is likely worn past its limit.
    Front end feels vague or loose: Hold the front brake and rock the bike fore-aft. Any play indicates headset bearing wear. Check stem bolts and fork crown race before your next ride.
    Pedalling feels rough or notchy: Bottom bracket bearings may be contaminated or worn. More common after riding in wet or muddy conditions.

    Phase 3: The Monthly Deep-Clean Routine

    Monthly · 45–60 min · Full tool kit

    Once a month — or every 5–8 rides for active riders — set aside an hour for a methodical, top-to-bottom service. This is where you catch the things daily checks miss and reset your bike to peak condition.

    Step 5: Drivetrain Clean & Lube

    The drivetrain is the highest-friction, highest-wear system on your bike. Clean it first, while everything else is dry, so contamination doesn't spread.

    Cleaning sequence: Chain tool → rear cassette (toothbrush in each sprocket gap) → chainrings → jockey wheels → chain again. Use a proper degreaser, not dish soap — dish soap degrades rubber seals in bearings over time.

    The WD-40 question: Don't use it on your drivetrain. WD-40 is a water displacer and light solvent, not a lubricant. It evaporates quickly, leaving a residue that attracts dirt and provides almost no load-bearing lubrication. Use dedicated chain lube: dry wax lube in dry conditions, wet lube in wet or muddy conditions.

    Chain replacement timing: Use a chain wear indicator. Replace at 0.5% wear to protect the cassette. By 0.75% you're accelerating cassette wear; by 1.0% the cassette is likely already damaged. For all Amflow models (PL, PX, and PR), Amflow recommends replacing the chain every ~1,000km.

    Step 6: Full Brake System Service

    Brake pads: Most pads have a wear indicator groove. If the groove has disappeared, replace them. New pads are typically 3–4mm thick; replace at 1mm or less. All three Amflow models are equipped with Magura hydraulic brakes — the PL uses MAGURA MT5 or MT7 Pro, while the PX and PR Carbon Pro use the Magura Gustav Pro with 203mm rotors. Use only manufacturer-compatible pads for each system.

    Rotors: Inspect for scoring, warping, and thickness. Rotors below minimum thickness (stamped on the rotor body) should be replaced. Never touch rotors with bare hands — skin oils contaminate brake surfaces and cause squealing.

    Hydraulic fluid: Replace once a year regardless of pad condition. Dark or murky fluid indicates moisture absorption, which reduces boiling point and brake feel. See Amflow's service guide for annual brake fluid change recommendations for your model.

    Step 7: Frame, Bolts & Contact Points Audit

    Use a torque wrench on all bolts contacting carbon fibre — overtightening is the number one cause of carbon component failure.

    Component
    Bolt size
    Typical torque
    Stem clamp (handlebar)
    M5
    4–6 Nm
    Stem to steerer
    M5
    5–7 Nm
    Seatpost clamp
    M5–M6
    4–8 Nm
    Saddle rail clamp
    M8
    8–12 Nm
    Chainring bolts
    M5
    4–6 Nm
    Brake caliper mount
    M6
    6–8 Nm


    Frame inspection: Look for cracks, paint stress lines, and impact marks. On all Amflow carbon frames, pay particular attention to the area around the pivot bearings and bottom bracket shell. The Amflow PL uses 6901 bearings at the two main pivots and 6801 bearings at the remaining 12 pivot points. The PX and PR share similar pivot architectures — lubricate all pivot bolts with anti-seize compound every 50 riding hours across all models.

    Adjustable geometry check (PX and PR): After any geometry adjustment on the Amflow PX or PR, re-check all adjustment bolts at the head tube, bottom bracket, and chainstay positions are torqued correctly before riding. The 40-combination adjustment system uses standard hex key bolts — carry the appropriate size on trail rides if you plan to adjust mid-trip.

    Step 8: The Post-Service Test Ride

    Before you call the service complete, validate your work with a short controlled test ride. This is not optional — it's how you catch the reassembly errors that happen even to experienced mechanics.

    What to test: Brake engagement (both independently, hard stop from 15mph); gear shifting through all gears under moderate load; any new noises that weren't present before your service; headset play replicated while riding slowly.

    If something feels worse after your service: Stop. The most common culprits are an incorrectly routed cable creating friction, a brake caliper that needs re-centering after pad replacement, or a bolt that wasn't fully tightened. Run through your work methodically before riding further.

    Part 7: Seasonal & Annual Maintenance — What Most Guides Skip

    Monthly maintenance keeps your bike reliable. Annual maintenance keeps your investment intact. These are the tasks that separate a bike that lasts two years from one that lasts fifteen.

    Annual Part-Replacement Schedule

    Part
    Replacement interval
    Notes
    Chain
    ~1,000km
    Use chain checker; replace at 0.5% wear
    Cassette
    Every 2–3 chains
    Replace sooner if skipping under load
    Brake pads
    When <1mm thick
    Check monthly; replace sooner if contaminated
    Chainring
    Every 3–5 chains
    Look for "shark fin" tooth profile
    Brake fluid (hydraulic)
    Annually
    Regardless of how brakes feel
    Gear cables & housing
    Annually
    Or when shifting doesn't respond to barrel adjuster
    Suspension fork service
    Every 100h or annually
    For Amflow PL/PX/PR: FOX recommends every 150h
    Rear shock service
    Every 100h or annually
    Air chamber + damper service
    Tires
    When tread is gone
    Replace sooner if sidewall is cracked or bulging

    When to DIY vs. When to Book a Workshop

    DIY Confidently:

    • Chain cleaning and lubrication
    • Tire pressure and tubeless sealant top-up
    • Brake pad replacement
    • Cable barrel adjuster tuning
    • Bolt torque checks (with torque wrench)
    • Cleaning frame, drivetrain, and cockpit
    • Replacing bar tape, grips, saddles
    • Battery charging and Avinox app updates
    • Amflow PX/PR geometry adjustments (head tube angle, BB height, chainstay length)
    • Amflow PR battery removal, charging, and reinstallation

    Book a Workshop For:

  • Hydraulic brake bleeding
  • Wheel truing and spoke tensioning
  • Headset or bottom bracket replacement
  • Suspension air chamber service
  • Carbon frame crack diagnosis
  • Avinox motor or battery servicing
  • Full drivetrain rebuild
  • Any fault-code issues on the Avinox OLED display
  • Amflow PR battery slide-rail damage or lock mechanism failure

  • For all Amflow models: Amflow has authorised stores globally. Find your nearest Amflow dealer for professional servicing, warranty support, and test rides.

    Part 8: Common Problems & Quick Fixes

    Problem
    Most likely cause
    Quick fix
    Time
    Go to shop if…
    Squeaky chain
    Dry or dirty lubrication
    Clean and apply fresh lube; run through gears to distribute
    5 min
    Noise persists after lubing — chain may be worn
    Soft brakes
    Air in hydraulic lines; pad wear
    Check pad thickness; adjust barrel adjuster (mechanical)
    2–5 min
    Hydraulic lever goes to bar; needs professional bleed
    Gear skipping under load
    Stretched cable or worn chain/cassette
    Barrel adjuster (half turns); check chain wear
    3 min
    Chain/cassette at wear limit; drivetrain replacement needed
    Puncture (tubeless)
    Thorn, glass, or rim impact
    Spin tire to seal with sealant; insert inner tube if unresolved
    2–10 min
    Sidewall tear larger than 5mm; sealant won't hold
    Creaking seatpost
    Lack of grease or carbon paste
    Remove, clean, apply grease (alloy) or carbon paste (carbon), reinsert at correct torque
    10 min
    Noise persists — seatpost may be cracked
    Chain drops (front)
    Worn chainring or narrow-wide needed
    Check chainring teeth for "shark fin" wear profile
    5 min
    Regular dropping despite good chainring — rear derailleur tension issue
    Avinox won't power on (e-bike)
    Battery depleted or app connection issue
    Charge battery; force-close and reopen Avinox Ride app; re-pair via Bluetooth
    5 min
    Error code on OLED display — contact Amflow support
    PR battery won't seat or lock (Amflow PR)
    Debris in slide-rail or lock mechanism
    Clean slide-rail with dry cloth; re-align battery and push firmly until lock clicks
    2–5 min
    Lock mechanism damaged or battery won't power on after reseating

    Maintain Smarter with the Amflow Range

    Good maintenance practices protect any bike. But the right bike makes maintenance simpler, riding lighter, and performance exponentially more rewarding. In April 2026, Amflow expanded its lineup with two new models — giving riders more choice across power, range, and geometry than ever before.

    Amflow PL — The Lightweight Full-Power Benchmark

    The original Amflow PL remains the benchmark for lightweight full-power eMTBs. At 19.2kg (Carbon Pro 600Wh, M frame), it's one of the lightest full-power eMTBs on the market — while the Avinox M1 motor delivers 105Nm of torque and peaks at 1,000W. The 2-inch OLED touchscreen, OTA firmware updates via the Avinox Ride app, and 80% battery capacity retention after 500 charge cycles make it the easiest bike in its class to maintain and monitor.

    Key specs:

    • Peak torque: 105Nm
    • Starting weight: 19.2kg (Carbon Pro 600Wh, M frame)
    • Max battery: 800Wh
    • Max range (Eco mode): 157km
    • Warranty: 5 years on carbon frame (first owner); 2 years on Avinox e-system

    Amflow PX — More Power, Smarter Geometry (New, April 2026)

    The Amflow PX arrives with the next-generation Avinox M2S motor — delivering 150Nm of torque and 1,500W peak power, a 45.9% increase in power density over the M1. Despite the power increase, the M2S unit weighs just 2.59kg and operates at under 45dBA, keeping the ride immersive and the motor effectively silent. The carbon frame weighs approximately 2.4kg, with the complete bike starting at 20.6kg.

    Where the PX stands apart mechanically is its 40-combination adjustable geometry: 5-position head tube angle (64.2° default, adjustable ±1°), 2-position bottom bracket height (345/349mm), and 4-position chainstay length (438–451mm). This means a single bike can be reconfigured for climbing efficiency or high-speed descending stability using only a hex key — no specialist tools required. The 700Wh custom battery supports 3x fast charging and a maximum range of 144km in Eco mode.

    For connectivity, the PX adds 4G IoT with GPS, allowing remote tracking and real-time system status monitoring via the Avinox Ride app — including the new offline navigation mode that syncs GPX/FIT/TCX routes directly to the OLED screen. The smart heart rate control feature automatically adjusts motor output to keep you in your target training zone.

    Key specs (Amflow PX Carbon Pro):

  • Motor: Avinox M2S — 150Nm torque, 1,500W peak power
  • Starting weight: ~20.6kg (M frame)
  • Battery: 700Wh with 3x fast charging
  • Max range (Eco): 144km
  • Brakes: Magura Gustav Pro with 203mm rotors
  • Suspension: FOX custom-tuned (2027 spec rear shock)
  • Wheels: 29" front / 27.5" rear mixed, Schwalbe Radial tires
  • Connectivity: GPS, 4G IoT, OTA, Bluetooth, offline navigation
  • Amflow PR — Removable Battery, Unlimited Range (New, April 2026)

    The Amflow PR is built around a fundamental shift in how e-bike range works: its 800Wh battery is fully removable via a slide-and-lock mechanism. You can charge the battery independently without bringing the bike indoors, swap a depleted battery for a charged spare mid-ride, and replace the battery at end-of-life without a workshop visit. The 800Wh capacity with 3x fast charging supports a maximum range of 158km in Eco mode — and with a second RS600 battery (available separately for XL and XXL frames), range extends further still.

    The PR Carbon Pro uses the Avinox M2S motor (150Nm, 1,500W peak), while the PR Carbon uses the M2 unit. The same 40-combination adjustable geometry system as the PX is present — with the PR's default head tube angle at 64.5° and chainstay length range of 440–452mm, suited to slightly longer travel and more technical terrain. The carbon frame weighs approximately 2.9kg, with the complete bike in the 22kg class.

    For connectivity, the PR integrates Apple Find My — allowing you to locate the bike and check battery level directly from the Find My app even when the Avinox system is offline, with no 4G connection required. The same offline navigation, heart rate control, and SmoothShift SRAM integration features available on the PX are also present on the PR.

    Key specs (Amflow PR Carbon Pro):

  • Motor: Avinox M2S — 150Nm torque, 1,500W peak power
  • Starting weight: ~22kg (M frame)
  • Battery: 800Wh removable, with 3x fast charging
  • Max range (Eco): 158km
  • Brakes: Magura Gustav Pro with 203mm rotors
  • Suspension: FOX custom-tuned (2027 spec rear shock)
  • Wheels: 29" front / 27.5" rear mixed, Schwalbe tires
  • Connectivity: GPS, Apple Find My, OTA, Bluetooth, offline navigation
  • FAQs

    What's the difference between the Amflow PL, PX, and PR?
    All three bikes share the Avinox ecosystem, full-carbon construction, and Magura hydraulic brakes — but serve different rider priorities. The Amflow PL (Avinox M1, 105Nm, from 19.2kg) is the lightest option, best for riders who prioritise weight and agility above maximum power. The Amflow PX (Avinox M2S, 150Nm, 1,500W, from 20.6kg) upgrades to the next-generation motor with 45.9% higher power density, adds 4G IoT connectivity for remote tracking, and shares the same 40-combination adjustable geometry — best for riders who want maximum performance and smart connectivity in a relatively lightweight package. The Amflow PR (Avinox M2S or M2, from ~22kg) introduces a removable 800Wh battery that charges independently and swaps in seconds — best for long-distance riding, flexible charging without moving the bike, and extended battery life management. All three feature the 2-inch Avinox OLED display, OTA firmware updates, offline navigation, and smart heart rate control.

    How often should I clean and maintain my bike?
    At minimum: a 2-minute ABC Check (Air, Brakes, Chain) before every ride, and a full drivetrain clean with lubrication once a month. Active riders (5+ rides per week) should do the monthly service every 2–3 weeks. After muddy or wet rides, wipe down the frame and chain before storing — grit left on surfaces accelerates wear significantly.

    What should I check before every ride?
    The ABC Quick Check covers the essentials: Air (tire pressure by feel), Brakes (firm lever feel well before the bar), and Chain (visual lube check). Add: thru-axle security, handlebar tightness, and for e-bikes, battery charge and system power-on. For the Amflow PR specifically, also confirm the removable battery is fully seated and locked. Total time: under 2 minutes once you've made it a habit.

    Can you spray WD-40 on bike gears?
    No. WD-40 stands for "Water Displacement, 40th formula." It's a water displacer and penetrating solvent, not a lubricant. It evaporates quickly, leaves a residue that attracts dirt, and provides virtually no load-bearing lubrication. Use a dedicated chain lubricant: dry wax lube in dry conditions, wet lube in wet or muddy conditions.

    Do I really need to lubricate my chain regularly?
    Yes. The chain is the single highest-wear component on your bike, in direct contact with every other drivetrain component. A dry chain creates friction that accelerates wear on the cassette, chainring, and chain itself — while making shifting slower and noisier. A well-lubricated chain running on a properly maintained drivetrain can last twice as long as a neglected one.

    How often should I replace my chain or cables?
    Chain: use a chain wear indicator and replace at 0.5% elongation. For most riders this is every 1,000–2,000km depending on conditions and lube quality. Gear cables: annually, or when shifting becomes vague despite barrel adjuster tuning. Brake fluid: annually for hydraulic systems regardless of feel. Cassette: typically lasts 2–3 chains; chainring 3–5 chains.

    Is it worth learning to maintain my bike myself?
    Absolutely — for the tasks covered in this guide. Home maintenance of chains, pads, cables, and bolts saves significant money and means you understand your bike intimately. You'll diagnose problems faster and catch issues before they become expensive failures. Tasks like hydraulic brake bleeding, wheel building, and suspension service genuinely benefit from specialist tools and experience. The DIY vs. workshop list in Part 7 gives you a clear line between the two.

    How do I know when a full service or tune-up is needed?
    Clear signs: shifting that doesn't respond to barrel adjuster correction, brakes that feel soft after confirming adequate pad thickness, persistent creaking after tightening all bolts, any play in the headset or bottom bracket, or a chain measuring beyond 0.75% wear. Also: annually regardless of condition for hydraulic brake fluid, gear cables, and suspension service.

    What maintenance does a bike need?
    At the highest level, a bike needs four things: clean and lubricated moving parts; correctly inflated tires; functioning brakes with adequate pad thickness; and a structurally sound frame with all bolts at correct torque. Everything in this guide flows from maintaining those four fundamentals.

    How do I do a full bike maintenance service?
    Follow the Phase 3 routine: (1) Drivetrain clean and lube — chain, cassette, chainring, jockey wheels; (2) Full brake inspection — pad thickness, rotor condition, lever feel, fluid clarity; (3) Frame, bolt, and bearing audit — torque check all bolts, inspect frame, test all pivot bearings; (4) Test ride to validate your work. For an annual service, add suspension servicing and cable/housing replacement.

    Key Takeaways

  • The ABC Check (Air, Brakes, Chain) takes 2 minutes and prevents 80% of roadside mechanical failures.
  • Every unusual sound has a specific source. A clicking pedal stroke, a creaking climb, a grinding under load — each maps to a clear cause and fix.
  • WD-40 is not a lubricant. Use dedicated chain lube matched to your conditions.
  • Replace your chain at 0.5% wear. It's the cheapest insurance against cassette and chainring damage.
  • Brake fluid degrades invisibly. Replace it annually regardless of how the brakes feel.
  • Use a torque wrench on all carbon components. Overtightening is the leading cause of carbon failure, not impacts.
  • On-road signals — sounds, lever feel, gear response — are your bike's real-time diagnostic report. Learn to read them.
  • Know your limits: drivetrain, pad, and cable work are DIY territory. Hydraulic bleeding, wheel truing, and suspension service belong in a workshop.
  • For e-bike owners: the Avinox system's OLED display and app diagnostics give you real-time component health data unavailable on analogue bikes. Use them.
  • Consistency beats intensity. A 2-minute pre-ride check every day outperforms a 4-hour annual service done reactively.
  • The Amflow PX and PR (launched April 2026) both run the Avinox M2S motor with 150Nm and 1,500W peak. Core maintenance principles are identical to the PL — with one addition for PR owners: inspect the removable battery slide-rail and lock mechanism monthly, and ensure the battery is fully seated before every ride.
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    Superlight Full-Power Electric Mountain Bike

    Amflow PL offers up to 105 N·m of continuous torque in an ultra-light build, delivering a superb balance of power, range, and weight.

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