RickBullotta
E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Sooooo....a few weeks ago my Pivot Shuttle started skipping under load. I immediately assumed the "usual suspects" - derailleur adjustment, worn chainring/chain, worn or damaged cassette or cog, and so on. Well, everything checked out there and I even did a preventative replacement of the chainring and chain (and kept them as spares). Same behavior.
I'm then thinking "oh f*ck, it must be inside the E8000 motor". Start Googling, note that it doesn't happen often but does happen. Ugh. That means downtime and a lengthy repair cycle/warranty games.
Then I go for the cassette, thinking that perhaps one of the small cogs is worn or damaged. But when I go to remove the cassette, it's seriously stuck on. I get out the heavy equipment (big f*cking hammer) and eventually get it off. At the point, the underlying issue reveals itself...
It turns out that one of the smaller cogs on the XT cassette was actually spinning on the freehub body (it literally chewed through the metal on the freehub body and started to skip under load). Some soft alloy freehub bodies can't handle the stress of an eMTB - in this case it was an Industry Nine Hydra hub.
I got a replacement freehub body, put it on, and the issue was completely gone.
Lesson to be learned? Soft alloys aren't good for eMTB hubs. Make sure the cassette lockring is properly torqued also.
I'm then thinking "oh f*ck, it must be inside the E8000 motor". Start Googling, note that it doesn't happen often but does happen. Ugh. That means downtime and a lengthy repair cycle/warranty games.
Then I go for the cassette, thinking that perhaps one of the small cogs is worn or damaged. But when I go to remove the cassette, it's seriously stuck on. I get out the heavy equipment (big f*cking hammer) and eventually get it off. At the point, the underlying issue reveals itself...
It turns out that one of the smaller cogs on the XT cassette was actually spinning on the freehub body (it literally chewed through the metal on the freehub body and started to skip under load). Some soft alloy freehub bodies can't handle the stress of an eMTB - in this case it was an Industry Nine Hydra hub.
I got a replacement freehub body, put it on, and the issue was completely gone.
Lesson to be learned? Soft alloys aren't good for eMTB hubs. Make sure the cassette lockring is properly torqued also.