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Thursday, 16 April 2026

Amflow PL Carbon Pro review: This eMTB makes you feel superhuman

Amflow PL Carbon Pro review: This eMTB makes you feel superhuman

8.9

Electric mountain bikes (eMTBs) have been creeping into trail centres and bike parks for a few years now, but they still get a mixed reception. The purists grumble about motors, the converts evangelise to anyone who will listen, and the curious majority sits somewhere in the middle, wondering what all the fuss is about.

I used to be in that curious middle group. I’ve been riding mountain bikes since childhood in Canada, where getting out on the trails is practically a rite of passage. That passion followed me through the UK and eventually to Australia, and over the years I’ve owned a variety of cross-country and downhill bikes, from Specialized, Kona, Trek and Cannondale. None had motors. The riding modes were just your legs, the gearing, and how much suffering you were willing to accept on the climbs.

But an eMTB is not a city e-bike. It has no throttle. You still have to pedal, and it still demands fitness and skill. The motor just amplifies what you put in. The real question is what happens to a rider when that amplification comes from one of the most powerful drive systems on the market. After several weeks on the trails and in the city with the Amflow PL Carbon Pro, I have a pretty definitive answer.

Amflow PL Carbon Pro with mud on it
You can choose from three frame sizes — I rode the Medium size, which was great for my 5’10” height. Image: Valens Quinn.

Table of contents

Who is Amflow, and what is the Avinox connection?

Amflow is a young brand, founded in 2023 and announced to the world at Eurobike 2024. If the company sounds unfamiliar, the name behind it probably does not: Amflow is effectively DJI’s entry into the eMTB world. DJI, the company synonymous with consumer and professional drones, has brought its engineering culture of precision sensors, compact motors and straightforward software to two wheels.

The heart of Amflow’s bikes is the Avinox Drive System. The Avinox M1 motor in the PL Carbon Pro packs 105Nm of continuous torque and up to 850W of peak assistance into a unit weighing just 2.52kg.

Specifications and price: Amflow PL Carbon Pro

Motor Avinox M1 Drive Unit, 105Nm continuous torque, 850W peak (1000W in Boost)
Boost mode 120Nm torque / 1000W, maximum 60 seconds
Battery 800Wh (optional: 600Wh) | Range: up to 157km (800Wh, Eco mode, flat road, 80kg rider)
Charging GaN 3x fast charger, 0-75% in approx. 90 minutes
Frame Ultra-light carbon fibre, 2.27kg (M size)
Complete bike weight 19.2kg (M size, with 600Wh battery)
Fork FOX 36 Factory, 160mm travel, GRIP X2 Damper
Rear shock FOX FLOAT X Factory, Trunnion (185x55mm), custom tune, approx. 150mm travel
Drivetrain SRAM X0 Eagle Transmission (electronic), 10-52T cassette
Brakes Magura MT7 Pro, 4-piston hydraulic disc, 203mm rotors
Tyres Maxxis Assegai 29×2.5 (front) / Maxxis Dissector 29×2.4 (rear)
Display 2-inch full-colour OLED touchscreen, integrated into the frame
Connectivity Bluetooth wireless controllers, Avinox Ride App (iOS/Android)
Riding modes Eco, Trail, Turbo, Auto, Boost + Walk assist
Head tube angle 64.5 degrees
Australia legal speed Assisted to 25km/h
Price $12,499 AUD (on sale from $13,999) | PL Carbon: $9,399 AUD
Official website amflowbikes.com/au

Design and build quality

The PL Carbon Pro is built around an ultra-light carbon fibre frame that weighs just 2.27kg. The complete bike tips the scales at 19.2kg with the 600Wh battery fitted, which is genuinely impressive for a full-power eMTB. For comparison, many rival electric mountain bikes in this class weigh closer to 23-25kg, and you feel every extra kilogram when you’re navigating technical terrain or lifting the bike over an obstacle.

The geometry is confidence-inspiring without being intimidating. The 64.5-degree head tube angle gives you stability at speed, while a 77-degree seat tube angle puts you in an efficient climbing position. The four-bar rear linkage is stiff and rattle-free, and I never heard the chain slapping or snapping around, even on rough descents, thanks to the overall design.

Suspension comes courtesy of FOX at both ends. The FOX 36 Factory fork up front provides 160mm of travel with a GRIP X2 damper that gives you meaningful control over compression and rebound. The rear FOX FLOAT X Factory shock (185x55mm trunnion) delivers around 150mm of wheel travel, with a two-position lever that lets you firm it up significantly for climbing efficiency. Component quality throughout is top shelf: the drivetrain is SRAM X0 Eagle Transmission with electronic shifting across a 10-52T cassette, and the brakes are Magura MT7 Pro four-piston hydraulic disc brakes with 203mm rotors. This is the kind of specification you’d expect on a high-end non-electric trail bike.

Motor, battery and performance

The Avinox M1 offers five distinct riding modes: Eco, Trail, Turbo, Auto and Boost. Eco and Trail speak for themselves, while turbo delivers maximum continuous assistance. Auto is the clever one, adjusting assistance in real time based on terrain and riding dynamics without any input from you. Boost is reserved for the seriously steep stuff, delivering 120Nm and 1000W for a maximum of 60 seconds before stepping back down. There is also a Walk mode that provides gentle assistance when you are pushing the bike on foot, which is more useful than it sounds when you’re pushing it up hill.

The bike I tested came with the 800Wh battery, which Amflow rates for up to 157km of range under controlled test conditions. Real-world range will vary enormously with terrain and mode selection, but I consistently found the battery life to be more impressive than I expected. The GaN fast charger brings the battery from zero to 75 per cent in around 90 minutes, which is fast enough that a mid-ride coffee stop at a cafe with a power point becomes a legitimate range-extension strategy.

One feature I found myself wishing for is a removable battery. The integrated pack means charging the bike requires access to a power point near wherever you store the bike, which is not always practical. The good news is that Amflow has clearly heard this feedback: the newly announced Amflow PX and PR models feature Avinox’s first removable battery design, which also enables a spare battery for significantly extended range. It’s the kind of practical upgrade that makes a real difference to how you plan longer rides.

In Australia, the motor assistance cuts out at 25km/h, which is the legal limit for power-assisted pedal cycles. In other regions, I think you can get assistance up to 45km/h, which I would love here. On flat ground and in the city, I can’t say that I was too happy to reach this artificial ceiling. On the trails where you rarely run that fast anyway, the assistance on climbs is where the system truly earns its keep.

What it’s like to actually ride

The honest truth about riding the Amflow PL Carbon Pro is that it changes the way you think. The moment the Avinox motor kicks in on a steep climb, a part of your brain that was previously consumed with rationing effort simply goes offline. Suddenly, the question is not “can I make it up this?” but “where do I want to go next?” The entire terrain becomes your playground. I found myself taking lines I’d normally dismiss and tackling climbs I’d never attempt on a conventional bike. It’s not cheating, it’s a completely different experience.

In Turbo mode, my absolute favourite, and thanks to the 10-52T SRAM cassette, even the most punishing gradients become almost effortless. I was pushing so much torque through my pedals that I worried that the chain might break – which it didn’t. The single front chainring setup makes complete sense here, as the range of gearing and the motor’s torque make a second chainring redundant. The SRAM X0 electronic shifting is fast and precise, though during my test, the system occasionally struggled to find one particular gear, so it probably needs a little recalibration.

The dropper seatpost is a revelation for steep descents. Dropping the saddle on the fly lets you shift your weight fully over the rear wheel and let the motor and the bike’s geometry do their work. The lever worked flawlessly, dropping the post, but it seemed to stick on the way back up. Minor issue, easily remedied with some lube.

Suspension was superb. The FOX fork absorbed chatter and mid-sized hits with composure, and the rear shock tracked the ground cleanly on rougher trails. At 5’10, I found the riding position comfortable and natural, with good head tube and seat angles. (You can order the bike in three frame sizes to fit your stature.) The Magura brakes deserve a special mention: they are exceptionally powerful and progressive. It took a few rides to dial in the modulation, but once I did, braking confidence was great.

One genuine frustration is the handlebar width. At 800mm, the carbon bar suits wide-open descents and chunky terrain well, but it catches on trees constantly in tighter, technical singletrack. Most experienced trail riders will want to trim a centimetre or two off each end with a hacksaw, and I would strongly recommend doing so before your first proper trail ride. It is a straightforward modification, but it is worth knowing before you head out for a ride.

Tech features: display, app and connectivity

The two-inch full-colour OLED touchscreen is integrated flush into the top tube rather than bolted onto the bar, which is a nice touch. It displays real-time data and lets you swipe between screens for riding stats, estimated range and mode selection. It is easy to read on the move once you know where everything is.

The bike is designed to be controlled via Bluetooth wireless controllers mounted on the handlebars, so you can switch modes without taking your hands off the bars. On my test unit, however, only one side’s controller successfully paired with the display, which meant I could not set up the dedicated Boost mode shortcut button or access Walk mode via the bar-mounted controls. As a result, I did not get to fully evaluate Boost mode on trails. This appeared to be a unit-specific pairing issue rather than a system flaw.

The Avinox Ride App connects to the bike for deeper customisation: you can fine-tune the power, torque and cadence parameters for each riding mode, set up anti-theft mode (which sounds an alarm and sends a notification if the bike is moved), and track the bike’s location in real time. After each ride, the app records a comprehensive set of data including speed, distance, cadence, power output, torque, gradient, altitude, calories burned and, with a compatible heart rate monitor, your heart rate. Everything syncs to Strava if you want to share with the broader riding community. I liked having this record, and it adds a fitness tracking dimension.

PL Carbon vs PL Carbon Pro: which should you buy?

The PL Carbon Pro that I tested sells for $12,499 AUD (on sale from $13,999), and the standard PL Carbon is available for $9,399. The $3,100 price gap reflects meaningful upgrades across the drivetrain, suspension and brakes. The headline difference is the shift from a conventional cable-actuated groupset on the Carbon to the SRAM X0 Eagle Transmission electronic wireless shifting on the Pro. The Pro also steps up to FOX Factory-level suspension at both ends rather than Performance-specification dampers, more powerful four-piston Magura MT7 Pro brakes in place of a two-piston setup, carbon rims instead of alloy, and the FOX Transfer Factory dropper post.

For riders who spend a lot of time on demanding, technical trails, the Pro’s component specification justifies the premium. For those new to the eMTB category or who prioritise the core motor and battery experience over top-tier finishing kit, the Carbon at $9,399 offers the same Avinox heart in a more accessible package. Both bikes share an identical frame, motor, battery options and geometry.

Who is the Amflow PL Carbon Pro for?

The Amflow PL Carbon Pro is an exhilarating, thoughtfully engineered eMTB. The combination of DJI’s Avinox motor technology, premium FOX suspension, SRAM X0 electronic drivetrain and a feather-light carbon frame puts it at the top of what is out there in the full-power trail bike category. It does not try to disguise the motor assistance; it embraces it and builds a ride experience around it that is genuinely different from conventional mountain biking, and genuinely joyful.

A removable battery would be welcome for more flexible charging options, though Amflow has addressed this in the newly announced PX and PR models.

Who is it for? Someone who loves getting outside on technical terrain, who wants to push further and climb harder than their fitness alone would normally allow, and who appreciates premium hardware. If you are a seasoned trail rider wondering whether an eMTB would compromise your experience, the honest answer is: it won’t. It will just change it, in ways you probably won’t want to go back from.

It should be noted that the PL Carbon Pro is nearing the end of its life as the new PX Carbon Pro looks to be a monster — it has a 1500W motor and supports geometry adjustments to customise it to your terrain and riding style. This means there could be some great discounts on the PL model, and it’s fair to say that the PX will only build on the PL in terms of the quality, performance and fun that it delivers.

Frequently asked questions

How long does the Amflow PL Carbon Pro battery actually last?

Amflow rates the 800Wh battery for up to 157km under controlled conditions, and in my real-world testing, it consistently delivered more than I expected. Actual range varies significantly with riding mode and terrain, but battery anxiety was never a factor across the trail rides I did. You could definitely do a day’s ride on a single charge – and there’s the option to change to ECO mode or even stop all power assist if you want to extend the charge. The GaN fast charger brings it from zero to 75 per cent in around 90 minutes, which makes topping up between rides genuinely practical.

Is the Amflow PL Carbon Pro legal to ride in Australia?

Yes. Like all power-assisted pedal cycles in Australia, the motor assistance cuts out at 25km/h, which is the legal limit for this category of e-bike. It also has no throttle, meaning you have to pedal for the motor to engage, which keeps it compliant with Australian road rules. You can ride it on shared paths and bike trails where conventional bicycles are permitted.

Do you need to be fit to ride the Amflow PL Carbon Pro?

Less than you might expect, but fitness still plays a role. The five riding modes give you genuine control over how hard you work. In Turbo or Boost mode, climbs that would stop most riders become manageable regardless of conditioning. Trail and Eco modes let you dial in a real workout if that is the goal. What the motor cannot replace is trail technique, particularly on technical descents, so prior mountain bike experience remains an asset.

How does the Amflow PL Carbon Pro handle tight singletrack?

Confidently, with one caveat worth knowing before you head out: the 800mm handlebar width catches on trees constantly in tighter bush sections. I would strongly recommend trimming the bars before your first proper trail ride. Beyond that, the FOX suspension handles technical terrain well, and the bike feels noticeably more agile than its eMTB rivals, largely thanks to the lightweight carbon frame.

Is the Amflow PL Carbon Pro suitable for someone coming from a conventional mountain bike?

It was for me. I came to it with years on non-electric trail and downhill bikes and found the transition natural rather than jarring. The handling, geometry, brakes and component quality all feel familiar to anyone with a mountain biking background. The motor simply removes the ceiling on where you can go and what you can climb, rather than changing how the bike fundamentally feels to ride. If anything, that is what makes it compelling, but it is still unmistakably a mountain bike.

Amflow PL Carbon Pro
DJI’s drone-making instincts have produced an electric mountain bike that will transform how you think about what’s possible on a trail.
Performance
9.5
Features
9
Ease of use
8.5
Design
9
Value for money
8.5
Positives
Avinox motor transforms climbs that would stop most riders cold
Featherlight carbon frame punches well below the weight class for a full-power eMTB
Top-shelf components
Battery life consistently exceeds expectations, with fast charging for topping up between rides
Negatives
Would benefit from a removable battery
Handlebars are way too wide
8.9

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DJI Osmo Pocket 4 steps up low-light performance, internal storage

DJI Osmo Pocket 4 steps up low-light performance, internal storage

Better slow-motion footage, improved low-light performance, and internal storage for the first time: the DJI Osmo Pocket 4 upgrades from its predecessor in multiple meaningful ways.

Officially announced overnight after a recent teaser, the Osmo Pocket 4 gimbal camera succeeds the impressive Osmo Pocket 3 from 2023 that quickly became a favourite among content creators. Its one-inch CMOS sensor is the same size, but it has been upgraded to support 240fps footage in 4K, something the previous model could only do in 1080p.

DJI’s gimbal camera also supports higher ISO levels, letting it compensate more when it’s dark out. The auto subject tracking is smarter, too, with ActiveTrack 7.0 taking advantage of the camera’s three-axis stabilisation to smoothly follow people or objects. If you place the Osmo Pocket 4 down, you can now start recordings via gestures, like a peace sign, or show your palm to enable subject tracking.

Another handy addition is built-in storage. MicroSD cards are still supported, but now you get 107GB of internal storage, so you can get shooting straight out of the box, plug the camera in, and transfer footage at up to 800MB/s.

In a rare win for consumers, who have faced increasing consumer technology prices with the global memory shortage, the Osmo Pocket 4 is actually cheaper than what the Pocket 3 was at launch. At $769 in Australia for the standard combo, the Pocket 4 is nearly $100 less than the Pocket 3’s $849 starting price. It’s a relief, considering DJI price increases hit the US midway through last year.

Another option is the $959 creator combo, which includes a DJI Mic 3, fill light, wide-angle lens, and a mini tripod with the camera.

I’ve been testing the DJI Osmo Pocket 4 and will have a full review on GadgetGuy soon.

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Insta360 teaser looks a lot like a DJI Osmo Pocket competitor

Insta360 teaser looks a lot like a DJI Osmo Pocket competitor

The creator camera market is about to heat up, if a recent social media teaser from Insta360 is anything to go by.

Coming just days after DJI teased the Osmo Pocket 4 gimbal camera, Insta360 posted a heavily pixelated image on Instagram of what appears to be its own gimbal camera. The image depicts a blurry look at the top of a dual-lens gimbal camera, perhaps to one-up DJI’s single-lens device.

Until recently, Insta360 specialised in action cameras, competing closely with GoPro’s recognisable range. But lately, it has brought out more versatile cameras for everyday content creation, like the X5, capable of capturing 360-degree footage. There’s also the Snap Selfie Screen, which attaches to the back of a phone to preview the main camera array.

Previous reports suggest that the teased device is the Insta360 Luna, which was previously mentioned at a company conference in February. Exact details and specs are unknown at this stage, but one common bit of speculation is that the Luna’s dual-lens design may support some level of optical zoom.

Based on Insta360’s social media post, all will be revealed at NAB Show, a trade show in Las Vegas hosted by the National Association of Broadcasters. From there, we’ll likely have a better idea of what this camera is all about and how much it will cost.

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Wednesday, 15 April 2026

Tapo launches cheaper smart lock to encourage keyless entry

Tapo launches cheaper smart lock to encourage keyless entry

Smart locks have been around for a while, but they’re starting to get more sophisticated and affordable. In an effort to make the technology a bit cheaper, there’s a new smart lock in Australia: the Tapo DL105.

Tapo, TP-Link’s smart home brand, announced the $249 DL105 as a slightly cheaper smart lock alternative to the existing $299 DL110 model. According to TP-Link, the DL105 has many of the same features, with a few differences.

For $50 extra, the DL110 has a more weatherproof design (IP65 versus IP54) and a flashier zinc alloy finish. Otherwise, both smart locks are pretty similar. Each one supports six different unlock methods, including fingerprints, inputting a code via the keypad, and using the Tapo mobile app.

Tapo DL105 smart lock with app
Image: Tapo.

Both locks also run on rechargeable batteries, topped up via a USB-C connection. In terms of smarts, they play nicely with Alexa, Samsung SmartThings, and Google Home, but there’s no word of Apple Home compatibility.

Within the Tapo app, also used for the brand’s range of security cameras, each lock’s activity is logged. Anytime someone unlocks the door or gets the keycode wrong, the app keeps a record and sends alerts. It also enables setting limited-time codes for visitors, giving you more control over who can access the home at all hours.

Tapo’s smart locks also include a built-in doorbell. However, there’s no camera, so if you’re after a video doorbell, it will need to be a separate device.

There’s an online listing via Tapo’s website for the new DL105 model, which is due to go on sale in Australia soon.

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First look: Moza’s well-priced wheel is a good sim racing addition

First look: Moza’s well-priced wheel is a good sim racing addition

Ever since building my dream sim racing rig, I’ve been trying to find ways of improving it or testing out new gear. So, I was pretty excited to check out the Moza KS Pro Steering Wheel.

At $589 in Australia, it’s one of the more reasonably priced steering wheels out there (some cost thousands of dollars!). Straight out of the box, the Moza KS Pro looks fantastic with its carbon fibre composite finish and feels genuinely premium in hand. The 300mm size is spot on, and the TPE grips make it super comfortable to hold.

Moza has packed this wheel with loads of features — rotary encoders, switches, a customisable 2.99-inch screen, and RGB telemetry lighting, plus forged carbon dual-clutch paddles on the back.

Based on my early impressions, this wheel feels like a big step up for any sim rig at a good price. I’m keen to spend more time with it on the virtual track in the coming weeks.

The post First look: Moza’s well-priced wheel is a good sim racing addition appeared first on GadgetGuy.


GoPro Mission 1 cameras use open gate to shoot now, edit later

GoPro Mission 1 cameras use open gate to shoot now, edit later

When you think of GoPro, small and rugged action cameras come to mind. That’s not changing, but the brand is doing something a bit different with the GoPro Mission 1 range, tipped to be a series of “low-cost, compact cinema cameras” with interchangeable lens mounts.

Including the Mission 1 Pro, Mission 1, and Mission 1 Pro ILS, the new GoPro range sports a large 50MP one-inch sensor with larger pixels, designed to shoot pro-level footage in dim lighting. Both the Pro models support 8K resolution and 60fps. They also support ’32x Slo-Mo’, which is a whopping 960 frames per second, when shooting in 1080p in a 10-second burst.

GoPro’s base Mission 1 model also supports 8K footage, albeit limited to 30fps. All three cameras support open gate recording to varying degrees. A feature also seen in some of Canon’s cinema DSLR cameras, open gate recording shoots using the full height and width of a camera’s sensor without cropping.

In the case of the Mission 1 cameras, the sensor’s open gate setting records in a 4:3 ratio, which you can then crop for different formats in the edit suite. For example, you could shoot some skiing footage that captures the widest possible view, and then find the framing while editing to suit a 16:9 or a 9:16 video, depending on the platform.

For the Mission 1 Pro cameras, 8K at 30fps open gate recording is possible, while the standard Mission 1 model supports 4K at 120fps. There’s a bit of editing flexibility, too, with HLG and 10-bit colour recording file formats available to use.

GoPro estimates that the battery life of its new cameras lasts upwards of five hours, largely driven by what’s being advertised as a more energy-efficient GP3 processor.

GoPro hasn’t shared the price of the Mission 1 range yet. That information is set to be revealed this weekend, ahead of pre-orders opening via GoPro on 21 May.

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Samsung’s stylish new compact speakers have landed in Australia

Samsung’s stylish new compact speakers have landed in Australia

If there’s one thing consistent about Samsung’s speakers, it’s that they have distinct designs. In recent years, there was the Music Frame, a speaker designed to look like art you hang on a wall. This year, Samsung has the Music Studio 5 and Music Studio 7, a pair of wireless speakers that, while not art-themed as such, are meant to furnish a home as much as they are meant to play music.

Revealed at CES 2026 earlier in the year, the Wi-Fi-enabled Music Studio speakers brandish what’s called a “Dot Design”. It’s pretty easy to see why: they have a big dot in the centre, meant to evoke a minimalist aesthetic.

Of the two, the Music Studio 7, priced at $749 in Australia, is the more powerful unit. It houses a 3.1.1-channel audio system, while the smaller $499 Music Studio 5 is a simpler two-channel setup. Both support many of the standard casting features, including Apple AirPlay and Google Cast. They also support Spotify Tap, letting you double-tap your phone to the speaker to start up a playlist.

Samsung’s Music Studio duo work with the brand’s Q-Symphony technology, so they can connect to Samsung TVs and soundbars for a fuller sound. Alternatively, up to 10 Music Studio speakers can connect and play music simultaneously if you’re keen to have one in every room of the house.

Samsung’s 2026 soundbars elevate audio, literally

Launching at the same time is Samsung’s latest Q-Series soundbar range, led by the 11.1.4-channel HW-Q990H model, which costs $1,999 in Australia. At the more affordable end of the scale is the $899 HW-Q600H 3.1.2-channel soundbar.

This year’s soundbars come with a feature called ‘Samsung Sound Elevation’. According to Samsung, the feature uses a soundbar’s up-firing speakers to make dialogue sound like it’s coming from higher, as in the TV instead of the soundbar that sits below.

Samsung HW-Q990H Soundbar
Image: Samsung.

Perhaps the most useful feature for most households will be ‘Auto Volume’. It aims to normalise audio levels, so you’re not suddenly jumpscared by wildly different volume levels when swapping between YouTube and free-to-air TV, for example.

This feature could help address audio inconsistencies with streaming content; it’s a common bugbear that people have to manually set different volume levels per input. If it also addresses the big volume difference between ads and actual content, Samsung might be onto a winner here.

Alongside the Music Studio and soundbar ranges, Samsung rounded out the launch with two updated Sound Tower party speakers. Each one is splashproof and kitted out with reactive LED lights. As for price, the MX-ST40F model costs $479 in Australia, while the bigger MX-ST50F costs $699.

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