Todd Pepin
New Member
Hi. I'm new here and hope someone can help. I just bought the E3 Path+. It's being used as a commuter for a 22 mile round trip. So far it's been great. Better than I expected, especially on a couple of the hills I have to climb. I've owned the bike for just about two weeks now and have a couple of issues cropping up.
1. I am experiencing death wobble. When the bike coasts up to 30 mph it's fine. Go over that and it begins to become unstable. Several people thinks it's an out of balance wheel. A local bike shop thinks it's a design problem. I haven't seen anything anywhere about this issue on this bike.
2. The rear wheel seems to have some kind of thump or wobble of it's own. If you lift the rear wheel off the ground and trigger the throttle you can feel the a shimmy in the back end. Again the shop could not find an out of balance wheel. What they did find was that the tire wasn't mounted on the rim correctly. They proceeded to fix that, but it didn't solve the wobble. I have a suspicion that this rear wobble may be contributing to the front wobble.
3. Yesterday (Saturday August 2, 2014) traveling close to 30 mph, touching the brakes to keep it under that and avoid wobble, the rear hub suddenly locked up and dragged for about 10 or 15 feet and released. I was not touching any brakes when this happed. I pulled over and checked to see if anything was wet, as the road was damp but not soaked. The electronics, battery and motor had no liquid on them that was apparent.
It should be noted that the death wobble was noticed from day one. It took a couple of rides to find the rear wobble. I find the bike shop's assessment of a design flaw to not be correct. If there was such a problem, it would have been found by reviewers and would have scored heavily against the bike. I've had many traditional bikes since I was old enough to ride. New bikes, hand-me-downs, dump fixer-uppers, and hacks. Not one of them ever had death wobble. Hoping it some kind of adjustment.
On a positive ending note, It's still the most fun I've had on bike, ever. It get's a lot of looks, turns heads, and it get's a lot of attention at work. Best of all I don't have to wear myself out on big nasty hills anymore, just pedal comfortably over them. Awesome!
Todd
1. I am experiencing death wobble. When the bike coasts up to 30 mph it's fine. Go over that and it begins to become unstable. Several people thinks it's an out of balance wheel. A local bike shop thinks it's a design problem. I haven't seen anything anywhere about this issue on this bike.
2. The rear wheel seems to have some kind of thump or wobble of it's own. If you lift the rear wheel off the ground and trigger the throttle you can feel the a shimmy in the back end. Again the shop could not find an out of balance wheel. What they did find was that the tire wasn't mounted on the rim correctly. They proceeded to fix that, but it didn't solve the wobble. I have a suspicion that this rear wobble may be contributing to the front wobble.
3. Yesterday (Saturday August 2, 2014) traveling close to 30 mph, touching the brakes to keep it under that and avoid wobble, the rear hub suddenly locked up and dragged for about 10 or 15 feet and released. I was not touching any brakes when this happed. I pulled over and checked to see if anything was wet, as the road was damp but not soaked. The electronics, battery and motor had no liquid on them that was apparent.
It should be noted that the death wobble was noticed from day one. It took a couple of rides to find the rear wobble. I find the bike shop's assessment of a design flaw to not be correct. If there was such a problem, it would have been found by reviewers and would have scored heavily against the bike. I've had many traditional bikes since I was old enough to ride. New bikes, hand-me-downs, dump fixer-uppers, and hacks. Not one of them ever had death wobble. Hoping it some kind of adjustment.
On a positive ending note, It's still the most fun I've had on bike, ever. It get's a lot of looks, turns heads, and it get's a lot of attention at work. Best of all I don't have to wear myself out on big nasty hills anymore, just pedal comfortably over them. Awesome!
Todd