"This electric bikes includes a 5yr warranty on the frame, 2yr warranty on all the electrics and 1yr warranty on the components."
Contrary to the conspiracy theorists (which would usually include me), other than a bent derailleur (user error) all the other problems are -or should be- taken care of under warranty.
'Tightened Cassettte as it was very loose. Gears Jumping under load on bottom cog. The rest seem fine, no battery with bike to test with motor on'
I barely tighten my cassettes on the hub, and never had one loosen up. How is that even possible with the direction of the chain movement? Lots of jerky starts perhaps?
How was the bike shop supposed to resolve a problem only evident under load, when no battery was available to test for the symptom?
The bike should have had a pre-delivery check before being handed over the owner, and Leisure Lakes must employ people who know what they doing. I think it safe to assume the rear derailleur is set up correctly.
How is the smallest cog/highest gear "worn out" if the second smallest is enough for you needs?
Chains usually wear out before cassettes? (Lots of moving parts, not the case with cassettes.) How do you wear out a single cog on a cassette? Unless it's the only one you use?
It actually "
fell" a
second time .......
"Slipping" on a middle cog, and
only a middle cog and a replacement hanger fixed the problem?
What is slipping? Climbing onto a lower or higher gear? Once a derailleur is set up correctly, how is that possible (with a cassette and derailleur fitted correctly of course). What is the change torque load is having on the drive system? Alignment?
I've had a look at the bike in question, and the frame looks quite robust. Probably not flexing then? Could the rear triangle now be misaligned as it's been dropped a couple of times? Is the chainline where it should be? My gut feeling is there is too much sideways (chainline) deviation. It would also account for the highest gear/smallest cog wearing as it (allegedly) has. As the bike is still under warranty, I would be asking for a new cassette
and new chain. But if there is excessive chainline deviation, this is going to be recurring problem, especially if the cog producing the worst deviation is the one being used the most.
There's just so much not making sense?