Sight VLT TQ
The Norco Sight VLT TQ is Norco’s mid-power take on the modern all-mountain e-MTB, and it is notable for using the same core chassis concept as the Gen 4 Sight VLT CX rather than a watered-down or short-travel derivative. It pairs a carbon mixed-wheel frame with 150 mm of rear travel, a 160 mm fork, and Norco’s VPSHP high-pivot suspension with an idler, then wraps that around TQ’s lighter HPR60 drive unit and a 580 Wh battery. The result is a slimmer, less bulky package than the Bosch CX version, while retaining the same aggressive intent: this is still a long-travel trail bike that can cross into enduro terrain, not a lightweight e-bike built around compromised suspension or conservative geometry.

| Stack | 618mm |
| Reach | 422.5mm |
| Top tube | 565mm |
| Headtube length | 105mm |
| Standover height | 700mm |
| Seat tube length | 385mm |
Fit and geometry
The geometry is firmly contemporary all-mountain, but with several details that shape the bike’s character. Across sizes S1-S5, the head tube angle is a consistent 64 degrees, paired with a 25 mm BB drop and 133 mm of trail, which points to stable front-end behavior on steep descents. Reach grows from 422.5 mm to 522.5 mm, while stack rises from 618 mm to 654 mm, giving the bike a roomy fit progression without abandoning a relatively low front end. Reviewers noted that this lower stack helps keep the front wheel weighted on steep climbs, though some riders may find the cockpit initially feels lower and more aggressive than expected.
Builds
The Sight VLT TQ is offered in three builds—C3, C2, and C1—with reported pricing from $6,999 to $10,599 USD. Review coverage consistently pointed to the C2 at $8,999 as the standout in the range, largely because it combines the carbon frame, TQ HPR60 motor, and 580 Wh battery with a Fox Performance Elite 36 fork using the Grip X2 damper, a spec level reviewers considered unusually strong for the price. Vital MTB’s tested C2 weighed 44 lb in size S4, which puts it squarely in the competitive lightweight e-MTB bracket without resorting to a tiny battery.
The C3 was frequently identified as the value option because it keeps the same chassis and drive system while dropping to more affordable parts, including DVO suspension and TRP Slate EVO brakes. At the top end, the C1 adds premium equipment, but reviewers questioned some of Norco’s cost allocation across the range. In particular, multiple testers criticized the use of relatively modest rear brake rotor sizing and noted that the TransX dropper appears throughout the lineup, from the entry model to the flagship. Even so, the overall assessment was that Norco put the money into the frame, suspension design, and motor-battery package first, which makes the lineup competitive on trail performance rather than showroom flash.
Reviews
Reviewers were broadly aligned in describing the Sight VLT TQ as one of the more convincing "light" e-MTBs currently available because it preserves a genuine mountain-bike feel. Vital MTB called it an intuitive, long-range package that sits at the intersection of playfulness, stability, range, and weight, while Jeff Kendall-Weed repeatedly emphasized its "authentically mountain-bikey feel" and its willingness to manual, jump, and change direction like a non-assisted trail bike. AOL/BikeMag made a similar point, framing it as a bike that "happens to have a motor" rather than one that dominates the ride. Across reviews, the combination of roughly 42-44 lb complete weight, the quiet TQ HPR60 motor, and the high-pivot rear suspension was seen as the key reason it avoids the heavy, over-assisted character of many full-power e-bikes.
The suspension and handling drew especially strong praise. Off-road.cc, Ciclonline, and Vital MTB all highlighted how the VPSHP layout and rearward axle path let the 150 mm rear end feel deeper than the number suggests, particularly on square-edged hits and rough "chunder." Reviewers also liked the bike’s dual nature: agile and flickable at lower speeds, then calmer and more planted when pushed hard into compressions and rough descents. That said, there were clear caveats. Several testers noted that the TQ HPR60 lacks the immediate punch of a Bosch-style full-power system on slow, technical climbs, and Ciclonline warned that the high-modulus carbon frame can feel quite stiff unless the suspension is carefully tuned. Component choices also drew criticism, especially the modest rear brake setup and, on some builds, Shimano Di2 drivetrain behavior that reviewers found noisy or less precise than competing systems.
Vital MTB
Norco - Vital MTB

Vital MTB
2026 Norco Sight VLT TQ C2 E-Bike - Reviews, Comparisons, Specs - E-Bikes - Vital MTB

Ciclonline
Norco Sight VLT TQ 2026: Prova, Test, Recensione e Analisi Motore TQ

Emtb-news
Norco Sight VLT TQ: Neues Light-E-MTB mit High-Pivot und TQ-Motor – eMTB-News.de

Aol
More Power Isn't Always Better — The Norco Sight VLT TQ Proves It - AOL

Jeffkendallweed
Norco Sight VLT TQ Review: Finally an eMTB That Feels Like a Real ...

Jeffkendallweed
Norco Sight VLT TQ Review: Finally an eMTB That Feels Like a Real Mountain Bike - Jeff Kendall-Weed

Cycling Magazine
Norco goes mid-power with Sight TQ - Canadian Cycling Magazine

Road.cc
Norco Sight VLT TQ C2 first ride review | off-road.cc

Theloamwolf
Tech Check: Norco Sight VLT TQ | The Loam Wolf

