2cool2fool
Active member
UPDATE: After posting this - I found my purchase receipt - and my motor is covered under the Specialized Extended Warranty until September, 2024. Problem solved for one year.
I have a 2020 Turbo Levo Alloy. It has 4,600 miles on it and it has as the older 2020 motor. Most of my riding is relatively flat trails and single track - not much jumping or heavy hill climbing. I live in the Midwest U.S. - with winters suck - so the bike is in my basement from November until mid-March each year. I've replaced the chain, tires and brakes every winter - and last year I replaced the entire drive train and upgraded it to SRAM Eagle with the AXS shifter.
I have had absolutely NO problems with the Brose motor, but the extended Specialized warranty expired in August of this year. The motor is still quiet, and runs fine. So here's my question:
Should I proactively pull the motor and send it in to the guys in Tennessee to have it rebuilt (seals, bearing, belt, etc.) during the winter down time - or just wait until it blows up? If it blows up during the riding season - it could take quite a while to get it pulled, rebuilt and back on the trail. During the winter - I've got months to do the work. I hate to yank a perfectly good motor - but sooner or later, it's going to crap out.
I'd appreciate any thoughts about what you'd do in my shoes. Thanks
I have a 2020 Turbo Levo Alloy. It has 4,600 miles on it and it has as the older 2020 motor. Most of my riding is relatively flat trails and single track - not much jumping or heavy hill climbing. I live in the Midwest U.S. - with winters suck - so the bike is in my basement from November until mid-March each year. I've replaced the chain, tires and brakes every winter - and last year I replaced the entire drive train and upgraded it to SRAM Eagle with the AXS shifter.
I have had absolutely NO problems with the Brose motor, but the extended Specialized warranty expired in August of this year. The motor is still quiet, and runs fine. So here's my question:
Should I proactively pull the motor and send it in to the guys in Tennessee to have it rebuilt (seals, bearing, belt, etc.) during the winter down time - or just wait until it blows up? If it blows up during the riding season - it could take quite a while to get it pulled, rebuilt and back on the trail. During the winter - I've got months to do the work. I hate to yank a perfectly good motor - but sooner or later, it's going to crap out.
I'd appreciate any thoughts about what you'd do in my shoes. Thanks
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