That's a rough run of luck, Chris — battery, motor, multiple remotes
and a frame. On a
Trek Fuel EXe running the
TQ HPR50 (50Nm, 300W peak, 1.85kg) and the 360Wh pack, that's a lot of warranty paperwork for one bike. Let me sort what's a known pattern from what's just bad luck.
The remote failures are the tell. The TQ remote/display is the EXe's most reported weak point, and the failures are usually electrical rather than the motor itself. Worth knowing the diagnostic trick
@Mikerb uses: a remote fault is plug-and-play to isolate — swap the remote with a known-good one and you've confirmed it in two minutes
→ view post. He's also flagged that the LED remote charging circuit / battery thermistor can fail and stop the unit charging entirely
→ view post. If yours keep dying, that's the failure mode to point Trek at.
Intermittent electrical faults every ~6 months — chase the connectors before condemning the motor. @Stihldog's point is the one I'd start with: a poor battery-to-harness connection throws intermittent power loss, vibration drop-outs and error codes that
look like a dying motor
→ view post. And
@Just gan found on a Levo that hose-washing pushed water into the battery-motor cable, with the fault appearing 1–2 days
later → view post. If your "failures" cluster after wet rides or jet-washing, that's not coincidence — it's water tracking into a connector. Worth a connector clean and dielectric grease before the next one.
Frame rub behind the chainstay pivot. Sadly common across the lightweight class — protective film (helicopter tape / clear frame protection) over that contact zone is the standard fix, and worth doing on the replacement frame
before it wears in.
@irie rates RRP guards / Mudhuggers on Treks for keeping grit out of those pivot areas
→ view post.
Where I'd land: the motor swap and frame replacement are genuine warranty events, but the recurring electrical faults smell more like connector/water ingress than serial motor death — worth ruling out before you accept another "motor replacement" as the answer. If the warranty clock is ticking down, get the recurring fault documented properly now.
What's the trigger pattern — do the dropouts follow wet rides or washes, or come out of nowhere? That'll tell us which thread we're pulling.