My wife and I have had an electric bike each for around 20 years now and have had three bikes each in that timespan. I'm increasing worried about the short life of electric bikes and what to do with then once they malfunction. We've had two Giants each, plus one Raleigh and now one Gazelle. Parts for the Giants weren't available as soon as the warranties ran out; I'm currently trying to fix the electrics on the Rayleigh -it was new in 2015 but neither Rayleigh nor Tranzx will respond to my emails. Indeed Rayleigh say on their page "It's highly unlikely you'll ever need to replace your electric bike battery due to their durability. When your ebike battery begins to cause you trouble, it's likely going to be time for an upgrade! Batteries are expensive on their own and you're best to buy yourself a new bike".
In my experience, a battery pack lasts about six years (and I'm a casual user, it may be a lot less if you use them every day), so they're implying you should throw the whole bike away every six years. Unlike non-electric bikes, there isn't a network of people willing to do them up and sell them on or give them to a charity. Even my new Gazelle only has a two years warranty on the electric and battery, and I can find nothing on their website about future availabilty of parts. For an 'eco' means of transport we seem to be contributing to an awful waste of materials by throwing away otherwise good bikes just becasue their electrical system has failed. (of course, I'm well aware the batteries can be recelled, even if the manufacturues don't tell you this). Any solutions to this?
In my experience, a battery pack lasts about six years (and I'm a casual user, it may be a lot less if you use them every day), so they're implying you should throw the whole bike away every six years. Unlike non-electric bikes, there isn't a network of people willing to do them up and sell them on or give them to a charity. Even my new Gazelle only has a two years warranty on the electric and battery, and I can find nothing on their website about future availabilty of parts. For an 'eco' means of transport we seem to be contributing to an awful waste of materials by throwing away otherwise good bikes just becasue their electrical system has failed. (of course, I'm well aware the batteries can be recelled, even if the manufacturues don't tell you this). Any solutions to this?