scott e bike mtb fully Scott Voltage eRIDE 900 SL eMTB
SKU: 91067129510
scott e bike mtb fully

scott e bike mtb fully Scott Voltage eRIDE 900 SL eMTB

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Description

scott e bike mtb fully Scott Voltage eRIDE 900 SL eMTBThe Scott Voltage eRIDE 900 SL is built around the same principle that defines the best lightweight eMTBs on the market: the motor should extend what you can do on the trail, not change how the bike feels doing it. Scott achieves this with the TQ HPR 50 a compact, 50 Nm motor that sits low and tight in the frame without dominating the ride character. Paired with a 360Wh battery in a full carbon HMF frame and Fox Factory suspension front and rear, the

The Scott Voltage eRIDE 900 SL is built around the same principle that defines the best lightweight eMTBs on the market: the motor should extend what you can do on the trail, not change how the bike feels doing it. Scott achieves this with the TQ HPR-50 — a compact, 50 Nm motor that sits low and tight in the frame without dominating the ride character. Paired with a 360Wh battery in a full carbon HMF frame and Fox Factory suspension front and rear, the Voltage eRIDE 900 SL is a 29er enduro machine that pedals and handles like a mountain bike with a well-placed assist, not a motorized vehicle with pedals attached.

The frame is built from Scott's HMF (High Modulus Fiber) carbon and uses a Virtual 4 Link kinematic suspension design — a four-pivot linkage system that separates pedaling efficiency from suspension movement, giving the 155mm of rear travel genuine independence from drivetrain input. The geometry is adjustable at the head angle, allowing you to steepen or slacken the front end to match your riding style or terrain. All frame cables and hoses are routed internally through Scott's Syncros Cable Integration System, keeping the build visually clean and protecting lines from trail debris. The UDH (Universal Derailleur Hanger) interface makes drivetrain compatibility future-proof, and a dedicated Range Extender Ready mount accepts an optional 160Wh battery without displacing your water bottle.

Scott's TwinLoc suspension remote is a standout feature on this platform. A single bar-mounted lever simultaneously controls the fork mode and rear shock mode — open, traction control, or locked out front and rear together. On technical climbs you lock both out in one movement; on descents you open both. It sounds like a small convenience but it changes how you interact with the bike in real trail situations, where you rarely have time to fiddle with individual adjustments. The Fox 36 Float Factory Kashima handles 160mm of travel up front with FIT4 damping (three modes plus low-speed compression adjustment), while the Fox NUDE 6T Factory EVOL Trunnion delivers 155mm of travel in the rear with the same three-mode range.

The drivetrain is SRAM GX Eagle AXS Transmission — 1x12-speed wireless electronic shifting with a 34T chainring on a Scott custom spider and a 10-52T SRAM XX Eagle XS-1297 cassette. The Syncros Hixon iC SL carbon handlebar runs 780mm wide with a rise configuration, and the Syncros Hixon iC SL integrated stem keeps cable routing internal from bar to frame. Braking is SRAM Code Silver Stealth with 200mm rotors front and rear — four-piston calipers with the stopping power appropriate for an enduro bike at any speed downhill. The Syncros Duncan 1.5S dropper post runs 180mm of travel, and Maxxis tires cover both ends — Assegai up front in MaxxGrip compound with EXO+ sidewalls, Dissector in the rear in MaxxTerra with EXO+, both in 2.6" width on the 29" Syncros Revelstoke 1.0 wheelset.

Design Benefits

  1. TQ HPR-50 Motor — Ride Feel First: At 50 Nm and 300W peak output, the TQ HPR-50 prioritizes natural pedaling character over raw power. The motor is compact enough to be positioned without fundamentally altering the frame's handling geometry, and the power delivery is calibrated to feel like an extension of your effort rather than an engine taking over. It's the right motor for a bike designed to still feel like a mountain bike.
  2. TwinLoc Suspension Remote: Scott's single-lever system controls fork and shock simultaneously — no reaching for two separate remotes, no interrupting your grip to make an adjustment. One move opens or locks out the entire suspension system. On technical climbs and fast transitions back to descent, this is a meaningful functional advantage over bikes that require individual adjustment.
  3. Virtual 4 Link Kinematic: Scott's four-pivot linkage separates pedaling input from suspension movement. The 155mm rear travel works on trail impacts without bobbing under power, and the kinematic is tuned to maintain traction through the full stroke rather than sacrificing small-bump sensitivity for anti-squat efficiency.
  4. Adjustable Head Angle Geometry: The ability to steepen or slacken the head tube angle is a feature that matters over time. As trails change, as your riding evolves, or as you move between different terrain types, geometry adjustability means the bike adapts to your needs rather than requiring a new frame. It's a long-term value that most bikes at this price don't offer.
  5. Range Extender Ready: The dedicated 160Wh range extender mount accepts an optional battery without competing with water bottle storage. On long enduro days or big alpine descents where you need more range, the extender is there without requiring you to leave your bottles at home — a practical engineering decision that other manufacturers have handled less elegantly.

Final Take

The Scott Voltage eRIDE 900 SL makes a strong case in the lightweight eMTB category. The TQ HPR-50 motor keeps the ride feel honest, Fox Factory suspension is dialed front and rear, and the TwinLoc remote is a genuinely useful feature that changes how you manage the bike on technical terrain. SRAM GX Eagle AXS wireless shifting, 200mm SRAM Code brakes, Maxxis Assegai and Dissector tires, and adjustable geometry round out a complete trail package at $12,999. This is a bike for riders who want serious eMTB capability without giving up what makes a mountain bike feel alive.

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SKU: 91067129510

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Jaren
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Being “Othered” is Real
Format: Kindle
Sky Full of Elephants opens with a haunting and unforgettable image: all the white people walking silently into bodies of water. That beginning alone tells you this is not a book that will play it safe. It is bold, layered, and deeply intentional. The writing is beautiful and the story forces readers to confront what Black history truly is: American history. The novel doesn’t just imagine a world; it holds up a mirror to the one we’ve lived in and the one we’re still shaping. It explores identity, belonging, grief, and survival in a way that feels both speculative and painfully real. As someone who grew up attending predominantly white schools, I connected deeply with Sidney’s experiences. Being “othered” (constantly reminded that you are different, that you don’t quite belong) leaves marks that follow you long after childhood ends. Some of the moments Sidney endures felt painfully familiar, and I found myself reflecting on my own younger self while reading. What struck me most, though, was reading this story as a mother. I have a biracial daughter, and her experience has been very different. She has never been made to feel like she doesn’t belong. She has never been othered. She has always been rooted in her Black identity, primarily raised by her Black mother, surrounded by family who affirm her. Even after I remarried and joined a Black family, she was embraced fully, never questioned, never treated as “less than,” never made to feel separate. Reading Sidney’s journey made me profoundly grateful that my daughter’s story has unfolded differently. It also reminded me how much environment, affirmation, and community matter in shaping a child’s sense of self. Sky Full of Elephants is more than a speculative novel. It is a meditation on race, memory, and belonging. It asks hard questions about America while honoring the fullness and complexity of Black identity. This book lingers with you. It sparks reflection. It opens conversations. And for me, it felt both personal and powerful.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2026
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S. Donaldson
Boise, US
★★★★★ 4
Good Read!
Format: Audiobook
I read this along with my son and his girlfriend in a family “book club”. We had a good discussion about the ending, as we each had differing perspectives, but that was fun! The book was really interesting, and the characters were so well defined and deeply moving. Good read, but the ending left us a little confused.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2026
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Katherine Ross
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Thought provoking
Format: Kindle
Sky Full of Elephants is a work of speculative fiction that begins with the premise that the white population of the United States has been wiped out. Starting a year after “the event” and following Charlie, a man who spent 20 years in prison due to a cowardly lie, and his resentful, biracial 19 year old daughter, who witnessed her only known family drown themselves, it is at its core a quest for identity in its many forms and how trauma can co-opt that search. In rating and reviewing this book, I’m aware that my lens as a Gen-X, cis-het, white woman, will have a differing view from others’ lived experiences. In reading other reviews, I definitely saw points that I didn’t consider, which I hope is the main point of the book. I do think, as a work of speculative fiction, that it does require the suspension of disbelief from the get go. It is a philosophical “what if” that Mr. Campbell invites the reader to consider. Intrigued by the premise, I was drawn into the story due to Mr. Campbell’s lyrical writing style. The narrative had a rhythmical flow to it that supported the world building and characterizations. I found Charlie to be a very sympathetic character, rebuilding a life shattered by lies in a new world and confronted with the daughter he never had a chance to know. Sydney, Charlie’s daughter, was more of a struggle to empathize with. While her feelings were justified and understandable, her growth throughout the novel was erratic. As the story has an ambiguous ending, perhaps her character will continue to improve. For supporting cast, the grumpy pilot Sailor and his nonbinary child, Zu, offer a counterpoint to Charlie and Sidney’s emerging relationship. The king and queen of Alabama and the thriving town of Mobile were well fleshed out. The Walkers and Sidney’s Aunt Agatha in Orange Beach represented those who were lost in their own way, either due to clinging to their former proximity to whiteness or to the religious biases they were raised with. I found the Walkers to be the most tragic of all. The questions of identity throughout the story are what kept be invested throughout. Are we defined by the color of our skin, our behaviors, the groups we belong to, the choices we make? Are others more valuable or worthy who don’t suffer the same things we do? Does there have to be those that are “lesser” to make us feel whole? As a trauma survivor with C-PTSD, I struggle with my own issues of identity and worthiness, and as a former Special Education teacher, I’ve been witness to that struggle in others. I have never understood or accepted the idea of White Supremacy or Christian Supremacy or any of the myriad ways that humanity continues to other each of us. In reality, there is no “us” or “them” only”we”. Charlie questions who he is as a Black man in the US, a convict, a teacher, a father, and ultimately a fixer and healer. Sidney grapples with her biracial otherness, her wealthy upbringing and sheltered life, the trauma of abandonment, and the lies that her life was built on. The ethical question of the machine at the epicenter of the event adds another layer to the story. While the effects of the first usage were unintended, once they were known is it right to continue to fix it and use it again? Can healing a part of collectiveness that harms or destroys another part ultimately be worth the cost? The world and its people are broken and desperately need healing. But just like the question of eugenics, what of value is lost when specific traits are universally stripped away? And who gets the to decide what is of value anyway? The ambiguity of the ending doesn’t answer the question entirely of what happens when the machine is repaired, but Charlie’s ability to fix things leads me hopeful. Personally, I cared enough about these characters to be interested in a sequel.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2026
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Patrice Ingram
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
A book that makes you think!
Format: Paperback
This was a super good read, very imaginative. It dealt with identity, belonging, insecurities, family matters. The way it was written was unlike any book I’ve read this year.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2026
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GorgeousDreamer
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 3
The Possibilities
Format: Kindle
Despite its potential, this book ultimately failed to resonate with me. I found myself repeatedly compelled to put it down, as the focus on the empowerment aspect was overshadowed by the narrative’s preoccupation with re-triggering ourselves through the perpetuation of a harmful lie. This lie, which has tragically cost many Black men their lives and livelihoods, diverted our attention from the more profound themes of rebuilding culture, redefining ourselves, and creating a new world. Instead of exploring the possibility of a beautiful utopia, we were subjected to a process of de-centering ourselves and centering them, their likeness, and the relentless pursuit of proving our worth. While there were indeed wise words that moved me, I was left questioning the purpose of dedicating so much time to those who did not share our sentiments. Who are these individuals who required our convincing, and who are we who felt compelled to do so? I found Sydney, her family, and the inhabitants of Orange Beach to be unlikable characters. I fear that the plot was compromised when the focus shifted to inclusion.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2026

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