On the subject if warranties. The bike comes with a 2 year warranty. If after say 18 months a motor fails and a new one is fitted. The new one doesn't get a two year warranty
Yes indeed. The motor will be replaced within the first 2 years, and then the customer may have to pay for further replacements after that time, once the bike is out of warranty, at £600 a pop.
When I requested 50 Cycles to commit in writing to have a more decent/appropriate warranty on the motor (e.g. 4 years or 6,000 miles), given the high price of the bikes and high price of a replacement motor (£600), they said they wouldn't do so (so not really believing in their products, nor that the issue has indeed been resolved by the manufacturer).
Also, the issue is not just getting free part replacements, but also the speed and quality of the service (was poor and slow in my case), the time wasted by customers to bring the bike back, chase 50 Cycles etc., and the inconvenience of being possibly stranded miles away without assistance (as it happened to me).
I then notified them that I was rejecting the bike, as there are in effect no guarantees or evidences that the product is "of suitable quality" and "fit for purpose" (I would expect a £2,500 or £3,000 bike, used by a commuter 3 days a week for instance, to last at least 3 years, or 6,000 miles).
I just don't trust Kalkhoff anymore, nor 50 Cycles to provide a suitable after-sale service (in line with their prices, and high margins they are making on those bikes). They are not pro-active either in doing product recalls to avoid failures.
They said they wouldn't take the bike back in their shop anyway. They did (had no real choice), and then I heard nothing from them for several weeks.
When I chased, they offered to replace the motor again (not really acceptable, on a recent bike, and was done poorly last time), replace the full bike by the same model (not really addressing the ongoing quality issue, since same motor) or refund only 40% of the bike price, while returning it to the manufacturer (bike was 11 months old, and in perfect condition/well looked after, so much lower valuation than used bikes in same conditions).
This is not also great news for Kalkhoff buyers, in term of depreciation of those supposedly "high quality" bikes. Based on 50 Cycles' own valuation, the bikes could be basically worth hardly nothing at the end of their warranty period.
Neither options were suitable to me, and so I have had to take legal action now... Didn't seem to bother them either.
I don't really know many retailers that wouldn't try to resolve issues with their customers and come to an agreement, to avoid legal actions, particularly when the product is suffering from design flaws, is clearly not fit for purpose nor of acceptable quality, and their service is less than optimum.