It wasn’t too long ago that a sub-10 kg e-bike would have made headlines. But such is the march of technology that a lightweight electric road bike is no longer news in its own right. But after the initial progress of creating a motor and battery light enough to keep the weight down, and sleek enough to hide so as to maintain conventional road bike aesthetics, we’re now in the refinement process. And that is worthy of our attention.

Take Scott’s new Fastlane. A cursory glance and it’s just another light e-bike with the assistance well disguised, but closer examination shows something far more interesting, thanks largely to the choice of power unit.

Scott Fastlane electric road bike

(Image credit: Scott)

The new TQ HPR40 is a deliberately low-output system, and one we’ve seen put to good use already on Canyon’s Endurance: ON Fly. So what’s exciting about an e-bike that doesn’t look like one and doesn’t deliver much headline power?

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Shimano Dura-Ace Di2 groupset and a Zipp 353 NSW wheelset.

Scott Fastlane Premium electric road bike

(Image credit: Scott)

The next rung down, the Fastlane 10, gets you Ultegra Di2 and a Syncros Capital set of wheels, which ups the overall weight to a claimed 10.6kg / 23.37lbs.

Scott Fastlane 10 electric road bike

(Image credit: Scott)

Finally, the 20 is equipped with Shimano 105 Di2, the same Capital 40 wheelset and tips the scales at a reported 11.1kg / 24.47lbs.

Scott Fastlane 20 electric road bike

(Image credit: Scott)

Pricing is as follows:

Scott Fastlane Premium: £11,099
Scott Fastlane 10: £7,299
Scott Fastlane 20: £6,399