Devinci E-Griffin Standard

Devinci

E-GriffinStandard

From$3,999
Claimed weight27.45 kg / 60.52 lbComplete bike
FrameAluminum Optimum S03Suntour NVX30 NLO | 80mm
GroupsetShimano Cues U4000 | 9sShimano Cues 9s 11-41T
WheelsV2 Comp 700c | 23mm inn…Kenda KwickNine | 29x2.2 |…
Tire clearance56 mm

Introduced for 2023, the current Devinci E-Griffin marked a clear shift away from a conventional comfort commuter toward a more SUV-style e-hybrid platform. The redesign brought Shimano EP6 and EP8 mid-drive options, a removable downtube battery in 540 Wh or 725 Wh sizes, suspension fork, hydraulic disc brakes, internal routing, integrated lights, rack and fenders, plus the unusual addition of a dropper post on a city bike. It also expanded the concept with a dedicated Step-Thru version rather than simply repackaging the same frame.

What distinguishes this generation is that it treats urban riding much more like mixed-surface utility riding. Tire clearance grows to 29 x 2.4, geometry becomes longer and slacker than the previous platform, and the build emphasis is firmly on stability, comfort, and load-carrying composure rather than speed or low weight. In the market, the E-Griffin sits at the premium end of the urban e-bike category: a fully equipped, high-torque commuter for riders dealing with hills, rough pavement, and everyday utility use, not a lightweight fitness hybrid or a fast-handling city bike.

Devinci E-Griffin
Build
Size
$3,999
02 / Specifications

Spec sheet.

Every component shipped with this build.

01Frameset
3 components
FrameAluminum Optimum S03
ForkSuntour NVX30 NLO | 80mm
Weight27.45 kg / 60.52 lb
02Drivetrain & brakes
10 components
CassetteShimano Cues 9s 11-41T
Bottom bracketShimano E-BIKE SYSTEMS EP600
Rear brakeShimano MT-201
Front rotorShimano RT26 | 180mm
Rear rotorShimano RT26 | 180mm
03Wheels & tires
4 components
Front wheelV2 Comp 700c | 23mm inner; Formula Disc sealed; Stainless 14G
Rear wheelV2 Comp 700c | 23mm inner; Formula EHL-135S | Sealed | 6bolts | 10x135mm | HG; Stainless 14G
Front tireKenda KwickNine | 29x2.2 | KS
Rear tireKenda KwickNine | 29x2.2 | KS
04Cockpit & contact
5 components
StemStem Satori Python ext 65mm Adjustable
HandlebarsV2 Comp | 640mm | 48mm rise | 40° backsweep
SaddleDevinci
SeatpostTranzX Dropper 31.6mm 1xLever
Grips/TapeVelo Ergo Comfort
03 / Geometry

Geometry & fit.

1 size published.

The published geometry points to a very upright, stability-first fit. In the listed one-size configuration, the bike combines a 671 mm stack with a relatively modest 415 mm reach, which places the rider in a tall, short cockpit suited to comfort riding rather than an aggressive commuting posture. The 68-degree head tube angle is notably slack for an urban bike, and paired with a long 480 mm chainstay and 1181 mm wheelbase it strongly suggests slow, predictable steering and good straight-line composure.

On the road, those numbers should translate to secure handling over rough pavement and under cargo, with less twitchiness than a typical flat-bar hybrid. The 73-degree seat tube angle is neutral rather than especially steep, reinforcing a centered, relaxed pedaling position. The tradeoff is clear: this geometry favors confidence, traction, and ease of control over tight low-speed maneuverability or quick directional changes in dense traffic.

Reach × Stack · size ONE_SIZEmm

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

685639593546500STACK ↑350370390410430REACH →ENDURANCERACE / AEROSize ONE_SIZE415 · 671
01Fit geometry6 values
Stack671 mm
Reach415 mm
Top tube621 mm
Headtube length170 mm
Standover height455 mm
Seat tube length400 mm
02Component geometry2 values
Handlebar width640 mm
Stem length65 mm
03Handling geometry5 values
Headtube angle68°
Seat tube angle73°
BB height295 mm
Wheelbase1181 mm
Chainstay length480 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 $3,999.

The available builds follow a clear two-tier structure. More affordable EP6 9-speed models use the Shimano EP6 motor with 85 Nm, a 540 Wh BMZ battery, 80 mm front suspension, and Shimano CUES 9-speed transmission; Opticycles lists these around $4,531 or £3,298 depending on market. Higher-spec models move to Shimano Deore 11-speed and, in the 2023 EP8 11-speed version, a Shimano EP8 motor with the larger 725 Wh battery, with listed pricing around 4,399 € or $5,247.

Across the range, the common thread is a heavy-duty utility specification rather than stripped-down value engineering: 29-inch wheels, hydraulic disc brakes, integrated urban equipment, and the same core frame platform. The main spec decision is less about basic capability than about range and drivetrain refinement. The 540 Wh / CUES builds are the more accessible entry point, while the 725 Wh / Deore versions make the strongest case for riders with longer commutes, hillier terrain, or a preference for a wider, more precise gear range.

01
Standard build
· Currently viewingStandard
$3,999On this page
05 / Reviews

From the press.

8 reviews from the cycling press.

Reviewers were broadly consistent in describing the E-Griffin as a calm, planted, upright urban e-bike with unusually strong hill-climbing ability for this category. Opticycles repeatedly highlighted the 85 Nm Shimano drive system, noting that the EP8-equipped version makes steep climbs feel much easier, while Momentum Magazine praised the smooth, natural assist rather than abrupt surges. Across reviews, the bike's roughly 27.2 kg weight was seen as a double-edged trait: awkward when lifting, but a major contributor to the stable, low-stress feel once moving.

Comfort was another recurring theme, though reviewers were careful to separate frame feel from component-driven comfort. Several noted that the aluminum chassis feels stiff or taut, with the real isolation coming from the 56 mm tires, suspension fork, upright cockpit, and spring-loaded saddle. Momentum also singled out the TranzX dropper post as a genuinely useful urban feature, making stops and starts easier on a heavy bike. The main criticism was a lack of agility: faster or more performance-oriented commuters may find it too heavy and too relaxed in its responses, and some reviewers felt the 9-speed Shimano CUES builds offer fewer ideal cadence options than the 11-speed Deore versions.