Devinci E-Spartan Lite GX AXS 12s

Devinci

E-Spartan LiteGX AXS 12s

Claimed weight21.45 kg / 47.29 lb (Size Medium)Complete bike
GroupsetSRAM AXS POD | 12sSRAM XS1275 | T-TYPE | 12…
WheelsRaceFace ARC30 29 | 30m…Maxxis Assegai | 29x2.5 | 3…
Tire clearance64 mm

The Devinci E-Spartan Lite is Devinci’s long-travel take on the mid-power e-enduro category, introduced for 2025 and carried forward unchanged into 2026. It pairs a hand-welded Optimum G04 6061-T6 aluminum frame with 165 mm of rear travel, a 170 mm fork, and Bosch’s Performance Line SX drive unit with the 400 Wh CompactTube battery. That combination puts it in a distinct niche: more aggressive and gravity-oriented than many lightweight-assist trail e-bikes, but still notably less motor-heavy and less full-power in character than a conventional 85 Nm e-enduro bike.

What defines this generation is how purpose-built it is. The frame is mullet-only, uses a 205x65 mm trunnion shock, Boost 148 rear spacing, a UDH hanger, ZS44/ZS56 headset standards, internal routing, and a 200 mm post-mount rear brake interface. Devinci also clearly designed it around modern fit priorities, including room for long-dropper sizing and short 155 mm cranks to improve clearance on technical terrain. Rather than chasing maximum battery size or all-out straight-line stability, the E-Spartan Lite is aimed at riders who want a more active, maneuverable e-MTB with real enduro travel and a more natural pedaling feel from the Bosch SX system.

Devinci E-Spartan Lite
Build
Size
01 / Buy

Where to get it.

1 retailer · size L.

Size
1 retailer · Size L
02 / Specifications

Spec sheet.

Every component shipped with this build.

01Frameset
2 components
Weight21.45 kg / 47.29 lb (Size Medium)
02Drivetrain & brakes
10 components
Shift leversSRAM AXS POD | 12s
Bottom bracketnull
Front rotorSRAM HS2 | 200mm
Rear rotorSRAM HS2 | 200mm
04Cockpit & contact
5 components
StemRaceFace Turbine R35 | B:35mm | L:40mm | 0°
HandlebarsRaceFace ERA 35 | B:35mm | R:40mm | W:800mm
SeatpostSDG Tellis 31.6mm
Grips/TapeDevinci | w/lock-on
03 / Geometry

Geometry & fit.

3 sizes published.

The available geometry points to a modern, aggressive e-enduro fit with a strong bias toward steep descents and quick handling. Across sizes M to XL, the head tube angle is fixed at 63.5 degrees and the chainstay length remains a very short 436 mm, while reach spans 460 mm on M, 480 mm on L, and 500 mm on XL. Seat tube angles are steep at 77.4 to 77.7 degrees, and wheelbases are 1245 mm, 1269 mm, and 1294 mm respectively. In practice, that means the E-Spartan Lite places the rider in a centered climbing position while keeping the front end slack enough for steep terrain and high-confidence descending.

The unusual part is the combination of that slack front end with such short rear-center numbers. A 63.5-degree head angle and 170 mm fork normally suggest a highly planted bike, but the 436 mm stays and mullet layout pull it toward a more reactive, manual-friendly feel. Reviewers’ impressions align closely with those numbers: the bike was repeatedly described as agile, easy to corner, and playful rather than purely glued to the trail. Riders looking for maximum high-speed composure may find the short rear end less settled than a longer race-oriented e-enduro, but for technical terrain and active line choice, the geometry is clearly tuned to keep the bike lively.

Reach × Stack · size Lmm

Where the handlebar sits relative to the bottom bracket — the single most important fit pair.

680644608571535STACK ↑375410445480515REACH →ENDURANCERACE / AEROSize L480 · 627
01Fit geometry6 values
Stack627 mm
Reach480 mm
Top tube618 mm
Headtube length115 mm
Standover height745 mm
Seat tube length460 mm
02Component geometry3 values
Crank length155 mm
Handlebar width800 mm
Stem length40 mm
03Handling geometry5 values
Headtube angle63.5°
Seat tube angle77.5°
BB height355 mm
Wheelbase1269 mm
Chainstay length436 mm

Which size should I buy?

Slide your height to see the recommended size. GearWise's fit algorithm works from the published stack, reach, and ETT — the brand's own recommendation may differ.

Your height
5'8"173 cm
5'0"5'5"5'10"6'3"6'7"
Recommended sizeBased on stack, reach & ETT for your height.

Calculated from GearWise's own stack / reach / ETT algorithm — the brand's size chart may recommend a different size, and a proper bike fit beats any calculator.

04 / Other builds

The lineup.

1 build, ranging $8,999.

The E-Spartan Lite is offered in two main complete builds, starting at $6,099 USD / $8,199 CAD for the Eagle 90 model and rising to $7,499 USD / $9,999 CAD for the GX AXS version. Both share the same Canadian-made aluminum frame, Bosch Performance Line SX motor, 400 Wh battery, and long-travel mullet platform, so the price difference is primarily about suspension and drivetrain tier rather than a different chassis or drive system.

The GX AXS build is the more notable spec package, pairing RockShox Zeb Ultimate and Vivid Ultimate suspension with SRAM Maven Silver brakes and a wired GX AXS drivetrain powered directly by the bike’s main battery. That last detail stood out in reviews as a practical integration choice, eliminating separate derailleur battery management. The lower-priced Eagle 90 build uses a Zeb Select fork, Vivid Select+ shock, and Maven Bronze brakes, making it the more accessible entry point without changing the bike’s core intent. Reviewers generally saw the base bike as solid, but several suggested the GX AXS model is the stronger value if budget allows, largely because of the step up to Ultimate-level suspension on a bike intended for hard descending.

01
GX AXS 12s build
· Currently viewingGX AXS 12s
$8,999On this page
05 / Reviews

From the press.

6 reviews from the cycling press.

Reviewers were notably consistent in describing the E-Spartan Lite as unusually playful for a 165/170 mm e-MTB weighing about 21.5 to 21.6 kg. BikeRumor, Cyclonline, and Forocarreteros all emphasized its poppy, animated ride quality, with several testers noting that it is easy to lift the front wheel, boost off trail features, and change direction quickly. Much of that character was attributed to the Split Pivot suspension layout, fixed mullet wheel setup, and especially the very short 436 mm chainstays. On trail, reviewers said it corners sharply, drifts willingly, and avoids the muted, plow-first feel that often defines heavier full-power e-bikes.

At the same time, reviewers did not portray it as a plush or ultra-forgiving magic-carpet bike. NSMB’s long-term test in particular described the rear end as loose and not especially plush, suggesting the bike prioritizes support, feedback, and maneuverability over a deeply cushioned feel. Setup also appeared to matter a great deal: one tester found the stock Zeb fork overly aggressive with four tokens installed from the factory, and several riders deviated from recommended sag numbers to gain comfort. The Bosch SX system was widely praised for natural assistance and strong technical-climbing traction, but the 400 Wh battery was a recurring limitation, with range anxiety frequently mentioned and the optional range extender framed as important for bigger days. NSMB also raised a concrete durability concern with the stock Race Face wheelset, reporting repeated truing issues over long-term use.