Crank drives wear your transmission.
Well, yes and no (just to put this into perspective for new to e-bike readers.).
I came to my ebike (TSDZ2 conversion of a Dawes Galaxy) due to reducing cycling power (an age thing
) and thus I used the motor to get me back to my 'pre-aged' level, and as such I use ECO mode almost exclusively and I do not get anymore transmission wear (chain, sprockets or chain rings) than I did when riding unassisted.
However, I'm sure that if I were to ride TURBO mode all of the time, then transmission wear would increase (the same as it would if Sir Chris Hoy rode my bike
).
If you spend a lot of time in top gear you will wear it out quickly as cogs with less teeth are more susceptible to wear.
Using a 12 tooth cog instead of an 11 will help. Raising your gearing to the point where a 13 tooth or 14 tooth gear works at the speed you want to travel at will be even better. The more teeth the more resistance to wear.
However you still need a low enough gear to get you up the steepest hill you need to climb.
Raising your gearing is a simple solution if you spend a lot of time in your top gear and wear it out quicker than the rest of the cassette and it does work. I did the same when commuting to work and back on my hard tail Haibike.
Mine was a 9 gear transmission and I used a 12/36 rear cassette.
100% agree - I have observed that some ebike riders who have maybe not a great deal of unassisted cycling experience, don't use the gears very much, so typically when on climbing a hill, I will drop gear to cope, some ebike riders just raise the motor power instead, a technique that will lead to greater transmission wear.
As other have said, I've cycled 10's of thousands of miles and never had an 11 or 12 tooth spocket wear out - the mid range ones, yes, but not the smallest one.
Excessive wear on the 11T sprocket could be down to the things already mentioned, or rubbish manufacturing, or riding style (as per what I mentioned above about gears etc)?