ReVolter
Active member
- Likes
- 33
- Location
- london ontario
Yup. I used the off the ground measurement.Yes this is done on OEM Stand. Bike completely unweighted.
Hopefully ReVolter can chime in and confirm his measures similarly
Yup. I used the off the ground measurement.Yes this is done on OEM Stand. Bike completely unweighted.
Hopefully ReVolter can chime in and confirm his measures similarly
I had my bike on a stand with the chain off. Powered it up and with throttle applied increased the speed and got a noticeable "Growl" out of the motor near the counter shaft area which got louder as speed was increased. I'm thinking that the tighter chain adjustment may have compromised the bearings in the motor. Got a support ticket started and sent a video to support of the condition. We'll see.
I'm sure they will refurbish the parts that are usable. instead of binning the whole powertrain.Wow. A 4.000$ assembly for a faulty bearing.
Is your bike still under warranty?
Who will?I'm sure they will refurbish the parts that are usable. instead of binning the whole powertrain.
This is my assumption and what I would do in Stark's position. Instead of sending out a replacement bearing and hoping that the bearing was the only issue, then having the customer or dealer pull apart a piece of my proprietary equipment to do the replacement and hoping they do it correctly. Its easier for me to just swap the whole powertrain. When the customer ships the powertrain back to me, I can check to confirm points of failure, if its just a bearing, then I can replace the bearing and then i'd have a working powertrain that I could put in a team bike, or demo bike etc.Who will?
I doubt any usable parts can cover the price of shipping from "Land of NOD" to the factory.
This is my assumption and what I would do in Stark's position. Instead of sending out a replacement bearing and hoping that the bearing was the only issue, then having the customer or dealer pull apart a piece of my proprietary equipment to do the replacement and hoping they do it correctly. Its easier for me to just swap the whole powertrain. When the customer ships the powertrain back to me, I can check to confirm points of failure, if its just a bearing, then I can replace the bearing and then i'd have a working powertrain that I could put in a team bike, or demo bike etc.
Analysis of failed components and making sure the customers is happy that I've solved the issue completely, the first time is more important for a new company.