Gates - who make the belt - quote life as 'about twice that of a chain'.
Not too clever when one is £100 and the other is a tenner, although I suspect Gates are being conservative and many owners will get longer life.
The belts are OK on good surfaces, but not so clever on tracks because if a bit of grit lodges on the internal surface of the belt it can break it.
The problem is made worse because the belts are made wider - dual track as Gates call it - to prevent roll off.
Also, the wider the belt, the higher the friction losses.
Belts can also make a bit of noise in the wet, no big deal, but a chain is silent which is one of the reasons it is close to 100 percent efficient.
As regard the NuVinci, the one I tried was noticeably draggy.
It's no coincidence that next no push bike makers use NuVinci, in that application every bit of drag counts.
Not so important with an ebike, although if you are pushing battery capacity for distance, the extra power used may make a difference.
I normally get about 500 miles out of a chain and that about my limit no more so just roughly i should only get about 1000 miles out of a belt and if it is 100 pound for belt that is a lot money to go to belt driven bike it sounds like the chain would be a cheaper option
People have told me in the past that you can get about 6000 miles out of belt and this is the reason why i was thinking about going to a belt set up to save the money on buying chains all the time and not have to worry about it and other thing is that the roads that i commute down are very dirty all the time
When i have come back from commuting down these dirty roads the chain is completely black and the chain does need degreasing straight away if I don't then the next time i ride then more then likely i will have problems changing gear all the time which i have had in the past
I think their is only about 2 months of the year in the high of summer when it nice and clean and clear when their is no mud on the road and it safe to say
I don't have to bother cleaning my chain it just doesn't stop and buying degrease you have to buy all the other products to keep the chain in good condition to get the most of the life out of the chain
Saying that i would only chain the belt on one if it was nearly falling off to get the most of the life out of the belt and i would always carry a belt with me all the time so if anything did happen then i would be able to chain the belt straight away the good thing is that i wont have to keep buying oil and degreaser all the time
On my bike it harder to change the chain because i have a guard to stop the chain catching your leg and it nearly impossible to on the road side because i would need to have a torque wrench to hand to be able to tight the pedal arm back up to 40 newton metres
I have been watching how to install a belt on YouTube and it looks very simple to do and i think it would be easy to do on the road side if needed too