Maybe ive been living under a rock, ive not heard of Brose issues till I came here, ironically to see if any had Flyon issues. I had a Bosch cx with no issues and 2k plus miles in all weathers, a riding friend has had 2 Bosch cx, one no issues for similar miles and still going strong with another friend who bought it off him, his 2nd bosch the motor was replaced with under 100 miles.
3 friends bought levos in 2017, no issues at all and both me and my main riding buddy from above got 2020 Levos in Jan, both probably 500 - 750 miles with no issue, *so far.
Seems to be many complaints at Brose and Spesh on here, perhaps rightly so with some of the unfortunate guys above experience, but anyone have any real time data to failure rate as a % to numbers sold, to me that would be far more telling than peddling the whole brose is cr*p and unfit for purpose stuff, you could easily find out with a freedom of information request if you were so inclined, probably from spesh or brose.
If there's a Corporate FOIA (Freedom of Information Act)?? News to me. (But that's definitely what I want for Christmas!)
We all know the procedure: "Gee, this is
the first time one of our customers
has ever had this problem." "This is rare." Then "What were
you doing when this happened? How
do you ride?
You must be very competitive. Did
it have a hard impact?" Then it's, "These things are designed to the highest industry standards, but
nothing lasts forever."
We once had the Model 54 Maytag washing machine. This is the machine, made in the 1950s that created the whole 'Maytag Repairman, loneliest man in town' thing. Reliable? When my girlfriend bought it, it was 20 years old, about 20 years later we sold it to someone else. The entire time we owned it the seal on a thrust bearing was shot and it leaked oil on the floor. Still ran. I bought the kit but never got around to fixing it. The timer broke. I replaced it. $50 (after thirty years). This was when I learned about the oil leak and bought the kit ($15). The guy who sold me the kit said it could leak like that forever and still run. I'll bet somewhere that 65 year old washer is still working, every model made between 20 and 30 years after it are not working. It's not because the secrets of the Maytag Model 54 have been lost to time, it's that one of the next washing machines, or EMTBs, you will sell will be to a former customer - unless the machine they've got is still working fine.
So no one wants to make them too good.
I think if there was a Corporate FOIA we'd find out that all these problems in all our stuff that we've been blamed and had to pay for were known all along. The conditions that cause the failure are known, the permanent fix is understood but possibly impractical, too expensive, or intentionally ignored. I don't think any company would make something like an EMTB to intentionally fail within a year or two. I haven't seen a lists of people complaining about too many tire punctures, or paint that scratches. Most of us are honest practical people. When a problem begins to get attention it's likely because it's outside of what we think is reasonable.
What I haven't seen in these lists is anyone saying, "Man, I slammed it hard. Every time." What I'm reading is some people rode a lot of kilometers, some people did a lot of steep climbing (that's the one that concerns me). Also, that noises began to happen at the start (but fixed under warranty - good, but quality control?) , or that noises started up after not that many months later. And the most worrisome information? That replacement motors are $1300, and there's no user servicing. Also no one says, they had the belt replaced and everything is good.
The broader problem is that this undermines the sport and business of EMTBs. It's taken me two years to finally say, 'yeah, okay $8k for a bike- I'll do it.' But do I want to spend 4k a year on a bike that lasts it's two year warranty? So the question now seems to be, what are the most reliable EMTBs?