Hope so! And I see there are 3rd party firms that will repair or service.If anyone will it’ll be Specialized I reckon.
Hope so! And I see there are 3rd party firms that will repair or service.
Is it a Brose motor in the new SL?
I am slowly warming up to the (massive) price difference!
I think after the big war we’ll all be to busy looking for rats to eat than worrying about what spesh have in stock ??
Hi, XXX,
Thank you for contacting us.
The eDrive unit is developed for a lifetime of 2 years / 10.000km.
In addition to having a two-year warranty. Obviously after those two years of warranty there is the possibility of needing some kind of maintenance. Also depending on the use you give to your bike.
About the electronics I cannot give you details because it is not ours.
Best regards
Sincerely
Abigail
Hello EbikeMotion
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e: [email protected]ebikemotion.com
You are mixing a warranty period (2 years) and obigation to provide spare parts & repair, which is a lot more that 2 years in EU, AFAIK in general it has to be for a lifetime of a product or at least 7 years ...
Why am I dreaming? The motor and gears are only going to be supported for TWO years. Is that acceptable to you? It's not 3, but I think that's also too short. You have a bike that costs between USD6525 and 16525.
If it's out of service in 2 years, it becomes a (bad and overpriced) Stumpjumper.
If we don't raise this issue with Specialized, no one will.
There are already companies emerging who will service/rebuild the Brose motors. Batteries will hopefully follow or aftermarket alternatives become available.
If you break a 10 year old Specialized frame and want a replacement, they're not going to trudge to the back of a huge warehouse and dust off one from the stack they keep just in case. They don't keep backstock like that. In the best case scenario, they're going to offer you a small discount on a new frame. IME, once you get a few years out from new, spare parts start to dwindle, it doesn't matter how much you paid for your bike originally. And that's for regular old bike parts, not the sophisticated electronics we have, motors that only have a couple year model life and batteries that can degrade simply sitting in storage. If you fry a circuit board 8 years in, I think you'll be reduced to ebay for a replacement, Specialized will have long since moved on.
You'll be able to find aftermarket people to supply some of it, like batteries, or rebuild it if you really want to. I think the silver lining to Brose motors dying with such regularity is that you all in the UK can keep rolling warrantying them for a long time.
I am not aware of any commitment from Specialized for a rolling warranty on their Brose motors in the UK. Where did you get that info from?
Wouldn't this encourage some owners to try to break their 22 month old motor every 2 years?my understanding is motors replaced after bike warranty have a 2 year warranty. so maximum purchase frequency should be every 2 years. (if they're available!).
This is my understanding....my understanding is motors replaced after bike warranty have a 2 year warranty. so maximum purchase frequency should be every 2 years. (if they're available!).
YesWouldn't this encourage some owners to try to break their 22 month old motor every 2 years?
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