China’s Aotos has taken a fairly ambitious swing at the US e-bike market, launching its new Flux X26 and X26 Pro on Kickstarter with bold claims around design, software and performance.
The highlight is the promise of a Class 2-compliant electric two-wheeler with up to 2,000W peak power, 100Nm of torque, a claimed 113km range and what Aotos calls a one-key wheelie function.
The Kickstarter campaign went live on March 25.
Aotos is pitching the standard Flux X26 from US$1,199 (RM4,789) and the X26 Pro from US$1,599 (RM6,386) under early-bird pricing, against stated retail prices of US$1,699 (RM6,786) and US$2,299 (RM9,182) respectively. Both products are high-performance electric bike with motorcycle-style design cues.
Kickstarter’s project page also said shipping is scheduled to begin in April.
Aotos described the Flux X26 as a smarter kind of electric machine rather than just another e-bike.
The company said the bike uses its own FLUX OS software layer, with GPS and wireless anti-theft functions, sensorless unlocking, a TFT display and over-the-air updates. The official product page also said the bike uses aerospace-grade 6061-T6 aluminium and dual-hydraulic suspension.
Some of the bigger marketing lines deserve a raised eyebrow.
Aotos called it the “Tesla of Two-Wheels” and the “world’s first wheelie-capable e-moto”, but those are branding claims rather than independently established facts.
The company said it was founded in 2016 and already has more than 100 after-sales service points across the United States.
If that after-sales network is genuinely there, it could prove more useful than the sci-fi marketing. Crowdfunded mobility projects often make a strong first impression, but the real question is whether the company can deliver and support the product properly.















