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Today’s DealsMegawatt 297 Comp
A 29″ / 27.5″ aluminum frame full suspension enduro e-bike with upper mid-range components.
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Manufacturer Price
$6,099| Frame | Aluminum |
|---|---|
| Suspension | Full, 170 / 170mm |
| Fork | RockShox Domain |
| Shock | RockShox Super Deluxe Select |
| Wheels | 29″ / 27.5″ Aluminum |
| Drivetrain | 1 × 10 |
| Groupset | microSHIFT Advent X |
| Motor | Shimano 250W 85Nm mid-drive |
| Battery | Shimano 504Wh |
| Brakes | SRAM DB8 Hydraulic Disc |
| Seatpost | Dropper |
Based on build material and quality level of the frame, fork, wheelset, groupset, suspension system, and more.
Compare the full Megawatt model range
View ComparisonSummary
The Nukeproof Megawatt is praised for its outstanding suspension performance, offering excellent traction and comfort on various terrains. It features intuitive and agile handling, making it a capable descender that inspires confidence. While the bike provides good value and a wide size range, some reviews note limitations in motor intelligence and rolling efficiency.
Outstanding suspension performance
Intuitive and agile handling
Excellent value for money
Wide range of sizes available
Comfortable and confidence-inspiring ride
Limited motor intelligence and display data
Slow and low efficiency rolling
Clunky motor noise
Potential cable wear issues
Not the longest range or power compared to competitors
It’s definitely one of the s around if you’re after a sweet handling, perfectly damped park or play bike.
Its supple coil-sprung rear shock is so adept at eating up high-frequency bumps that traction and comfort are excellent on all trail surfaces.
The bike excels on the descents with its intuitive, confidence-inspiring handling and capable suspension, appealing to both beginners and advanced riders.
Brains and brawn make the Nukeproof Megawatt Carbon RS 297 an unstoppable force.
Feedback?
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Oct 2023 · Jessie-May Morgan
Nukeproof launch the Megawatt carbon with SRAM Powertrain motor; available in two models both enhanced in capability with SRAM Transmission

Oct 2023 · Alan Muldoon
When I tested the alloy Megawatt Factory 297 in our 2023 best E-bikes of the Year test, I loved the handling, fit, suspension performance and top-end specification. The stumbling block for me then was the limited range of the Shimano 630Wh battery that powered the Shimano EP8 motor. Well, the brand new Megawatt Carbon addresses my single concern with a 720Wh battery, and then some. Designed from the ground up around SRAM’s new Powertrain e-bike ecosystem, that combines the Brose-made motor, the Eagle T-Type transmission and AXS wireless shifting, it’s a brand new beast. Need to know Full carbon frame designed around MX wheels RockShox Vivid Ultimate shock and 170mm travel RockShox Zeb Ultimate fork with 170mm travel SRAM Eagle Powertrain motor, 90Nm torque, 680W Peak power SRAM Powertrain 720Wh removable battery Auto Shift and Coast Shift functionality SRAM XO AXS drivetrain Nukeproof Horizon Wheels DH casing Continental Kryptotal tyres Storage under the motor cover Available in 5 frame sizes S to XXL Two models: Starting with Pro build at £8,799.99 Frame Reimagined in carbon, the latest Megawatt 297 is altogether sleeker and lighter than the old alloy frame. The system weight is not that much lighter though, due to the bigger, heavier battery – my test bike weighed just over 24kg. Not bad given that it’s a 170mm travel bike with DH casing tyres, designed to be ridden on the most challenging terrain. Motor and battery But what about the new SRAM motor? With 90Nm torque and whopping 680W peak power the Brose made SRAM motor clearly has benchmark numbers, and from the first pedal stroke it felt punchy and purposeful, but with smooth composed delivery of power. Which is the best e-bike motor? Power, punch and range compared Six magnets on the rear hub-mounted speed sensor ensure that the motor gets a really accurate speed signal, and combined with pedal speed, the SRAM motor can figure out if you’re climbing or descending, without needing a motion sensor. That, combined with a lot of clever electronics is what enabled SRAM to offer Auto Shift and Coast Shift. That’s just the tip of the iceberg though and if you haven’t seen it already, Danny did a deep dive on the Auto-Shift and Coast Shift features of the new Powertrain, so I won’t cover that again. Geometry and sizing In terms of geometry, the new Megawatt isn’t a major departure from the original. The bigger motor and slide out battery pack have forced the chainstay length to grow by 5mm to 447mm. So Nukeproof also slackened the head angle by a hair to 63.5º to maintain a similar weight distribution. And while brands like Specialized are offering an increasing array of geometry adjustment on the Turbo Levo and Levo SL, the Nukeproof has none. Not even a flip chip on the shock mount. Nukeproof hasn’t gone down the size specific chainstay route either, but the seat tube angles on the bikes do steepen up as you go up the size range, …Continue reading »
Good geometry and sizing. Increased range, power and tranquillity from the SRAM motor. Auto Shift clearly has merit but I need more time on it. AXS gives an ultra-clean cockpit. Wide size range
Only two power modes. SRAM Powertrain and surrounding Auto Shift tech drives the price up. No geometry adjustment

Oct 2023 · Seb Stott
The new Megawatt has 170mm of travel, a carbon frame, and SRAM's new motor.

Jun 2023 · Alex Evans
Nukeproof’s newly honed Megawatt retains its easy-to-ride character
Easy to ride quickly
Great spec and price
Coil shock is smooth
Neat frame updates
Steep seat tube angle
Michelin tyres lack grip in colder weather and roll slowly
Large gaps between coil spring rates might make setup tricky for some

May 2023 · Ron Koch
The Megawatt is every bit of the awesome enduro weapon that we had hoped it would be and then some.

May 2023
The Nukeproof MegaWatt 297 is a solid machine, with capable descending performance and a nice element of agility and playfulness retained.
Climbing traction and comfort
Comfortable descending
Neutral handling
Fast and capable descender
Handles big hits and chatter smoothly
Limited pedal clearance
Questionable value
May 2022 · Guy Kesteven
Does adding a Shimano motor to an enduro bike with a 13-year race history make the Nukeproof Megawatt a standout e-MTB?
Outstanding suspension performance
Addictively agile mullet handling
Excellent cost-effective component targeting
Solid Shimano motor
Limited display data
Clunky motor noise
Slow, low efficiency rolling
Potential cable wear on steerer tube

Jun 2021 · Rudolf Fischer
Nukeproof present their first eMTB. We tested the new Megawatt 297 Elite Alloy 202ONE featuring a Shimano EP8 motor and variable battery concept.
| Frame | Nukeproof Megawatt 297 Alloy, 170mm Travel, custom triple butted hydro-formed tube set, internal Battery, Internal cable routing through downtube, Enduro Bearings, Boost 148mm rear axle spacing, 3D contoured Rubber frame protection, Shimano STEPS compatible. BB Standard: STEPS, Press Fit Color: Comp |
|---|---|
| Fork | RockShox Domain, 29”, Motion Control RC damper, 170mm, 44mm Offset, BOOST, Debonair, 1.8 Tapered Steerer, Gloss Black Travel: 170mm Spring Type: Air |
| Shock | RockShox Super Deluxe Select R, Custom, S/M - 0L2 LNL1 SB C1, L/XL/XXL - 0L2 LNL SB C1 tune, 230x62.5mm, Bearing End, 2 bottomless tokens fitted Travel: 170mm |
| Bottom Bracket | STEPS, press-fit |
| Headset | Nukeproof Neutron E-Bike Block Set, sealed bearings, ZS56/28.6 – ZS66/46 |
| Stem | Nukeproof Neutron AM, 45mm, black |
| Handlebar | Nukeproof Neutron V2, S/M: 12mm Rise Width - 780mm, L/XL/XXL: 25mm Rise Width - 800mm |
| Saddle | Nukeproof, Black |
| Seatpost | Brand X Ascend internal with Brand-X Remote lever, S:125mm drop; M:150mm drop; L:170mm drop; XL/XXL:200mm drop Type: Dropper |
| Grips | Nukeproof Sam Hill Signature |
| Rear Derailleur | Microshift Advent-X, RD-M6205, 10-Speed |
|---|---|
| Crank | e*thirteen EP8, 165mm, 34T, Boost |
| Shifters | Microshift Advent-X, SL-M9605-R, 10-Speed |
| Cassette | Microshift Advent-X, CS-G104, 10-Speed, 11-48T |
| Chain | KMC, 10-Speed, with Quick Link |
| Chain Guide | Shimano EM800 drive unit mount |
| Brakes | SRAM DB8 4-POT Type: SRAM DB8 Hydraulic Disc |
| Rims | Front Wheel: Sun-Ringle Duroc SD37 Comp 29"", 15x110mm // Rear Wheel: Sun-Ringle Duroc SD37 Comp 27.5"", Shimano Microspline Driver, 148x12mm |
|---|---|
| Tires | Front: Maxxis Assegai 29”x2.5 WT 3C MaxxGrip/DD/TR, Rear: Maxxis Assegai 27.5”x2.5 WT 3C MaxxGrip/DD/TR |
| Disc Rotors | SRAM Centerline 220mm Front / 200mm Rear |
| Motor | Shimano STEPS EP801, 250W, 85Nm |
|---|---|
| Battery | Shimano EN805LA, 504Wh |
| Display | Shimano SC-EN600 with Shimano SW-EM800-L Assist Switch |
| Charger | Shimano E6002 |
First added July 11
Last updated October 17
Not listed for 955 days