scott e bike mountainbike 2021 Scott Voltage eRIDE 910 Bike
SKU: 62113409289
scott e bike mountainbike 2021

scott e bike mountainbike 2021 Scott Voltage eRIDE 910 Bike

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Description

scott e bike mountainbike 2021 Scott Voltage eRIDE 910 BikeThe Scott Voltage eRIDE 910 Bike is Scott's trail focused eMTB built from HMF carbon fiber and designed to deliver natural feeling pedal assistance without the bulk and weight typical of electric trail bikes. It borrows its platform from the Genius all mountain bike, adding Scott's discreet Integrated Suspension Technology layout and the TQ HPR50 motor system to create something that rides more like a capable 160mm trail bike than a motorized hauler.

The Scott Voltage eRIDE 910 Bike is Scott's trail-focused eMTB — built from HMF carbon fiber and designed to deliver natural-feeling pedal assistance without the bulk and weight typical of electric trail bikes. It borrows its platform from the Genius all-mountain bike, adding Scott's discreet Integrated Suspension Technology layout and the TQ HPR50 motor system to create something that rides more like a capable 160mm trail bike than a motorized hauler. On 29" wheels across all sizes, with 160mm up front and 155mm at the rear, the Voltage eRIDE is set up for serious trail riding — capable on the climbs, composed and controlled on the descents.

At the heart of the Voltage eRIDE 910 is the TQ HPR50 mid-drive motor. TQ's design uses a harmonic gear system that significantly reduces the physical footprint of the drive unit — the motor weighs 1.8kg — while generating up to 50Nm of torque and 300W of peak power. The result is a motor that runs quieter than most and delivers assistance that feels close to your own pedaling cadence rather than fighting it. A 360Wh internal battery handles the range, and the frame is designed to fit a TQ range extender (an additional 160Wh) alongside a full-size water bottle inside the front triangle. A top-tube-mounted display shows range, battery status, power in and out, and the selected mode at a glance. The system connects to the TQ smartphone app via Bluetooth and ANT+ for deeper monitoring and settings control.

Scott builds the Voltage eRIDE 910 frame from HMF carbon fiber, the same grade used across much of their performance mountain bike lineup. The Integrated Suspension Technology layout routes the Fox NUDE 6T EVOL Trunnion rear shock inside the frame rather than above the top tube. Scott's engineers designed this arrangement to lower the center of gravity, improve lateral stiffness around the shock pivot, and protect the shock from trail debris — the latter helping with long-term service life. A sag indicator at the rocker pivot makes suspension setup more accessible. Shock access is through a hinged, rubber-coated downtube cover with a port for on-trail adjustments that doesn't require removing the panel. The angle-adjustable headset allows a ±0.5° head tube angle adjustment without swapping parts. Geometry runs aggressive for the trail category: 63.9° head tube angle, 77.1° effective seat tube angle, and 455mm chainstays across all four sizes, with a size Large reach of 485mm.

The 910 spec opens with a Fox 36 Float Rhythm Air Grip fork — 160mm of travel on a 15x110mm axle — paired with the Fox NUDE 6T EVOL Trunnion rear shock at 155mm. The drivetrain is a 1x12 setup: Shimano XT M8100 SGS rear derailleur paired with Shimano Deore M6100 shifters and a 10-51 cassette, all driven by an FSA alloy 34T crank. Stopping power comes from Shimano Deore M6120 four-piston hydraulic disc brakes on 203mm Shimano RT64 rotors at both ends. Rolling stock is Syncros X-30S tubeless-compatible wheels wrapped in Maxxis Dissector 29x2.6 tires — a tire choice that suits mixed trail and all-mountain conditions well. The Syncros cockpit spec includes a Hixon 1.5 alloy bar at 780mm wide with 8° backsweep, a Syncros AM 1.5 stem, and the Syncros Duncan Dropper 1.5S post with travel that scales by frame size: 140mm in small, 180mm in medium, and 210mm in large and XL.

The Voltage eRIDE 910 is built for trail riders who want genuine eMTB capability without the handling penalty that heavier, motor-forward designs carry. The TQ HPR50 favors smoothness and integration over outright torque — riders whose primary goal is maxing out steep, technical climbing power may prefer systems like Bosch or Shimano EP8 for their higher output. What the Voltage gives in return is a mountain bike that handles more like its non-motorized counterpart: responsive on technical terrain, stable at speed, and quiet enough to keep the experience firmly on the right side of the trail-bike spectrum. At $6,119.99, the 910 delivers the full Voltage eRIDE platform at a build level that matches the bike's trail-riding brief without overreaching on spec.

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SKU: 62113409289

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Verified Purchase
Doc Watson
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 3
Gothic Star Wars
Format: Paperback
This trade paperback collects all the issues for the Screaming Citadel story spread over several titles, including the main stay Star Wars series and the Dr Aphra book. As one might expect from a story spread over different titles with different artists and writers, the presentation varies. The art is all over the place. In the Marco Checchetto-drawn initial issue, everyone’s favorite amoral artifact hunter, Dr Aphra, is a striking space vixen. But in the following issues she’s hardly recognizable as the same character--mousier, if still menacing, in her trademark Russian tanker’s hat. To a lesser degree, the same is true for the other characters, including the main SW group. It’s understandable, but a bit disconcerting. The story centers on Dr Aphra, who, in need of a Jedi for one of her typically nefarious purposes, recruits Luke into her scheme. Unfortunately for Aphra, she’s up against a more ruthless foe in the harlequin-looking vampire-like Queen of the Screaming Citadel. Before long, the rest of the group has to show up to rescue them. It’s a gothic story, set in scary castle—not the usual Star Wars fare. There are some good points. Dr Aphra’s almost sociopathic outlook is always good for a few choice lines, the “murderous machines” Bee Tee and Triple Zero are on hand for their own gruesome commentary and some of the Queens hench-people, while not given much to do, are interestingly designed. But overall, the horror movies plotline didn’t seem much like Star Wars to me. Recommended for those who enjoy that type of story, or completists.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2018
P
Verified Purchase
PWDecker
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
Luke and Doctor Aphra team up!
Format: Paperback
This is the second crossover event in the Marvel Star Wars comics. It brings the ongoing Doctor Aphra and Star Wars series together. I liked the pairing of Luke with Aphra. They play well off of each other with Luke's naive goodness and Aphra's experienced gray morality. I liked when she called him a wannabe padawan. There are some well designed characters in this comic. The residents of the Screaming Citadel have a goth bdsm vibe. Luke even gets to dress up. I liked seeing him in something different. I want to know more about Sana and Aphra's past!!! Please, Marvel, make a queer love story prequel!!! The murder droids are wonderful. Having them on the same side as the "good guys" for at least the time being led to some funny situations. The last panel intrigued me. I give this graphic novel a 4/5. I am always here for more Doctor Aphra!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2017
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Kindle Customer
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent mini series.
Format: Kindle
This is an excellent follow up to Vader Down. Luke Skywalker and friends take on a bigger threat than The Empire and Darth Vader that is connected to the Jedi. Luke and Dr. Aphra join forces to find the answers Like is seeking. Truly worth reading and entertaining.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2019
R
Verified Purchase
Ryan of the East Coast
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Source material for Nolan's trilogy is powerful writing and art...
Format: Paperback
The Long Halloween is great, but I actually had more fun reading through Dark Victory. It's a crime mystery that consistently had me guessing through to the conclusion about who The Hangman's true identity was. What I really loved most was the evolution of the characters' personalities--from Jim Gordon to Harvey Dent to Bruce (who really is more in his iconic "Batman" persona here)--that began in Batman: Year One to Batman: The Long Halloween and into Batman: Dark Victory. It really does work like a trilogy. It's also notable to include Gotham city's underworld itself as a character of its own. Batman begins (pardon the pun) in Year One with a quest to sort of rid the city of the mafia, which is and has been the main criminal body up until this point. In The Long Halloween, the mafia begins to lose power because of the rise of the Batman's presence. During that time, some of the most insane and dangerous criminals escape Arkham Asylum and begin quietly terrorizing the city anew, spreading like a virus. Slowly, the "freaks"--as the mafia calls them--start to gain more and more power by simply being a more unorganized crime source (as opposed to organized crime). Characters like Pamela Isley, Solomon Grundy, Mr. Freeze, the Penguin, Scarecrow, the Joker, and others, establish and strengthen their grips on Gotham's criminal underworld. It's nice that these villains--these "freaks"--also aren't the main conflict in Dark Victory (or The Long Halloween or Year One, for that matter); they appear when it is effective for them to appear, slowly taking more prominence in the setting of the story as it progresses. The main conflict has to deal with the solving of the mysteries behind The Hangman killings. The Long Halloween and Dark Victory are, primarily, crime mysteries, which is what makes them interesting. What makes them great literature, however, is the creative team that is Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale. Loeb's writing is really well-crafted here: the entire arc unfolds at a consistent pace and he balances out dialogue with Batman's internal narration very smoothly. And, as I mentioned previously, personality and narrative arcs of the main characters (Gordon, Batman, and Dent) have fully matured by this point in the trilogy, leaving the supporting characters a chance to evolve and come into their own. Much of these progressions are not just depicted by the writing, however; Tim Sale (who worked previously with Loeb on The Long Halloween) elevates and perfects his artwork in this story. There's not a change in the look of the characters, so you know it's definitely his style, but you sense immediately (especially if reading Dark Victory right after finishing The Long Halloween) the new level of attention paid to composition of the drawings. Shadows and silhouettes, contrasts between setting and characters, everything adds to the mood and atmosphere of the characters and the scenes they're a part of. In terms of the print itself, the paperback is excellent. This and The Long Halloween have really nice paper, which I'll catch myself sometimes randomly sniffing in the middle of a read to enjoy the new paper smell. The ink is really crisp, the colors pop, and the design of the book itself is laid out very clearly. There aren't page numbers or a contents page, but every issue is separated by chapter pages that include gorgeous, high-contrast artwork to help distinguish which issue you're on. Additionally, the print comes with an introduction by David S. Goyer, who co-wrote the Nolan film trilogy. Overall, I can't stress enough how gorgeous this trade paperback is and how excellent and top-tier this story arc is. I really enjoyed it just as much, if not more so, then The Long Halloween. No other Batman story arc has topped my enjoyment of this particular trilogy. Highly recommended in addition to Batman: Year One and Batman: The Long Halloween.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2019
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Verified Purchase
Kris
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
I love this comic book!
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
I love DC comics and obviously the Batfam are some of the most well known and loved characters within the DC universe. I love the art style and story in this comic. If you are debating whether or not to purchase this comic, DO IT!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2025

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