I picked up my brand new Haibike SDuro AllMtn 6.0 on Saturday. The bike is fantastic but I'm having some problems which I need to some advice on.
The chain broke after only 15 miles. I wasn't riding the bike hard, it is brand new after all and I'm the sort of person that really takes care of my things, and I was being very careful to ease off when shifting to avoid damaging the drivetrain. I put this down to bad luck or perhaps a faulty chain and I did a 100 mile round trip back to the bike shop to get it fixed. The shop replaced the chain free of charge and the guy in the shop explained that the Yamaha motor kicks in very fast and to take care when setting off from a standing start, ideally setting off with assistance switched off. He also explained that the replacement chains are quite expensive at around £40. I took his advice on board but I have to say, given how careful I had been I found it very difficult to believe that the chain breaking was because of anything that I had done.
So I just took the bike out again today, and the chain has broken again! This time after 20 miles leaving me stranded in the middle nowhere 10 miles from home - luckily I was able to get a friend to pick me up in the car. Again I hadn't been riding the bike hard, I had been taking it easy and being careful to ease off when shifting and when setting off I had assistance completely switched off.
Surely ebike chains cannot possibly be this fragile so what could be the problem here? The drivetrain is Shimano XT and the guy in the shop pointed out that there is a switch on the rear derailleur which adds extra tension and reduces chain slap for going over rough terrain. I've just noticed that it has been in the on position (that's how it left the shop and I assumed it was ok to leave it like that). Could that be the issue?
More generally I've had some other issues with the set up of the bike -
The chain breaking for a second time and the rear derailleur not being indexed properly has changed my mood from disappointed to annoyed. Surely the latter is really basic stuff that any bike shop would set up properly before the customer collects the bike? I'm now left wondering whether I wouldn't have been better off buying the bike locally from Evans rather than a specialist ebike shop 50 miles away as it's a major PIA, not to mention costly, having to doing a 100 mile round trip to the bike shop to get all this stuff fixed.
Am I right to be annoyed or is this normal with ebikes? Any advice would be gratefully received.
The chain broke after only 15 miles. I wasn't riding the bike hard, it is brand new after all and I'm the sort of person that really takes care of my things, and I was being very careful to ease off when shifting to avoid damaging the drivetrain. I put this down to bad luck or perhaps a faulty chain and I did a 100 mile round trip back to the bike shop to get it fixed. The shop replaced the chain free of charge and the guy in the shop explained that the Yamaha motor kicks in very fast and to take care when setting off from a standing start, ideally setting off with assistance switched off. He also explained that the replacement chains are quite expensive at around £40. I took his advice on board but I have to say, given how careful I had been I found it very difficult to believe that the chain breaking was because of anything that I had done.
So I just took the bike out again today, and the chain has broken again! This time after 20 miles leaving me stranded in the middle nowhere 10 miles from home - luckily I was able to get a friend to pick me up in the car. Again I hadn't been riding the bike hard, I had been taking it easy and being careful to ease off when shifting and when setting off I had assistance completely switched off.
Surely ebike chains cannot possibly be this fragile so what could be the problem here? The drivetrain is Shimano XT and the guy in the shop pointed out that there is a switch on the rear derailleur which adds extra tension and reduces chain slap for going over rough terrain. I've just noticed that it has been in the on position (that's how it left the shop and I assumed it was ok to leave it like that). Could that be the issue?
More generally I've had some other issues with the set up of the bike -
- The front brake disc was rubbing slightly. Had this looked at when the bike was in the shop to have the chain replaced. Still rubbing slightly but less than it was before and the guy at the shop said it should sort itself out once the pads have worn in. But there is now intermittent noise from the front brake calliper area (not just rubbing) which doesn't sound right. And having removed and replaced the wheel to get the bike in the car I can now barely get the disc in between the pads and the wheel doesn't spin freely. I took care to insert a spacer between the pads when the wheel was removed and I didn't touch the front brake lever, so I'm not sure why the gap between the pads is smaller than it was. When I look at the pads I can see that one of them isn't straight and they're wobbling side to side inside the calliper. Surely that can't be right?
- Front derailleur wasn't indexed properly resulting in chain coming off when shifting from small to large chain ring. This was fixed when I had the chain replaced.
- Having now had the opportunity to put a few more miles on the bike I've noticed that the rear derailleur isn't indexed properly either. Sometimes I have to double shift and occasionally it will change gear without shifting.
The chain breaking for a second time and the rear derailleur not being indexed properly has changed my mood from disappointed to annoyed. Surely the latter is really basic stuff that any bike shop would set up properly before the customer collects the bike? I'm now left wondering whether I wouldn't have been better off buying the bike locally from Evans rather than a specialist ebike shop 50 miles away as it's a major PIA, not to mention costly, having to doing a 100 mile round trip to the bike shop to get all this stuff fixed.
Am I right to be annoyed or is this normal with ebikes? Any advice would be gratefully received.