Shogun7s+
Member
- Region
- USA
I purchased my new Allant+ 7S last week and so far am happy with the bike, but the customer experience with Trek in regards to knowledge of the bike and what they provide has not been great (although I must stress that everyone that I have worked with have all been super nice and have tried to be helpful).
For brevity's sake, I will skip the full paragraphs and stick to bullets:
- The bike comes with a generic Trek/Bosch Electric Bike manual: The manual covers multiple motors (w/o telling you which one you have) and provides little in value other than some really basic information. And for some reason, whomever put the manual together thought that each section should be repeated in 3 different languages before moving to the next section as opposed to just dividing the manual into languages (this is a very minor annoyance, but just seems odd).
- There is no information specific to the bike that is provided at all. Maybe I am just expected to know about the certain settings on the fork, etc but it would be nice if they even provided that information on their website.
- Conflicting information on whether to remove the battery when transporting: I know that there is a topic on this already, but the manual says to transport your bike with the battery taken out, but the person at the store told me to absolutely don't do that and that 'lawyers who don't know anything probably wrote that'.
- Selling the bike without the latest firmware: When I bought my bike I was assured that it had the latest firmware, when it got to me (230 Miles later) I find out that it does not have the latest firmware.
- Staff is not knowledgeable about the bike: When I brought the bike to my LTBS I asked about accessing the settings menu so I could do things like being able to turn off my light. After first telling me that I already could turn off the light and trying to do so (and failing) in a way that didn't match what I researched, they told me that I could update the software myself by downloading it from the Bosch site. He said he had confidence in me since I seemed to have done my research and only a few people he knew had 'bricked their bikes', but that I would be ok as long as I followed the instructions. My thought here is maybe he was confusing it with one of the other displays that does allow you to do some some software updating?
- Trek charges for software updates: I realize this is due to Bosch not allowing us plebes access to do it ourselves, but Trek should either pressure Bosch to let people do it themselves or at least cover the upgrades for a certain amount of time like a phone manufacturer. Unless of course that want that extra revenue...
- Frame lock mount: I went to the store and inquired about purchasing a frame lock; after having to explain to the employee what that was, I then asked him how I would mount it to the bike and he had no idea as he did not see any bosses. It was only after someone on this forum pointed them out did I find out that the bike had them.
Most of these things on their own are pretty minor and not a big deal, but combined they are a bit concerning. All this being said, so far I really like the bike and everyone that I had talked with at the Trek stores have been super friendly and helpful (or at least have attempted to be helpful), but one of the main reasons I bought a Trek and paid a premium is for what I thought would be a better experience than going with a smaller company (or one that had less presence in the US). Now it's only been about a week, so hopefully I will have better experiences going forward and I am going to try another LTBS to see if the experience is better there.
For brevity's sake, I will skip the full paragraphs and stick to bullets:
- The bike comes with a generic Trek/Bosch Electric Bike manual: The manual covers multiple motors (w/o telling you which one you have) and provides little in value other than some really basic information. And for some reason, whomever put the manual together thought that each section should be repeated in 3 different languages before moving to the next section as opposed to just dividing the manual into languages (this is a very minor annoyance, but just seems odd).
- There is no information specific to the bike that is provided at all. Maybe I am just expected to know about the certain settings on the fork, etc but it would be nice if they even provided that information on their website.
- Conflicting information on whether to remove the battery when transporting: I know that there is a topic on this already, but the manual says to transport your bike with the battery taken out, but the person at the store told me to absolutely don't do that and that 'lawyers who don't know anything probably wrote that'.
- Selling the bike without the latest firmware: When I bought my bike I was assured that it had the latest firmware, when it got to me (230 Miles later) I find out that it does not have the latest firmware.
- Staff is not knowledgeable about the bike: When I brought the bike to my LTBS I asked about accessing the settings menu so I could do things like being able to turn off my light. After first telling me that I already could turn off the light and trying to do so (and failing) in a way that didn't match what I researched, they told me that I could update the software myself by downloading it from the Bosch site. He said he had confidence in me since I seemed to have done my research and only a few people he knew had 'bricked their bikes', but that I would be ok as long as I followed the instructions. My thought here is maybe he was confusing it with one of the other displays that does allow you to do some some software updating?
- Trek charges for software updates: I realize this is due to Bosch not allowing us plebes access to do it ourselves, but Trek should either pressure Bosch to let people do it themselves or at least cover the upgrades for a certain amount of time like a phone manufacturer. Unless of course that want that extra revenue...
- Frame lock mount: I went to the store and inquired about purchasing a frame lock; after having to explain to the employee what that was, I then asked him how I would mount it to the bike and he had no idea as he did not see any bosses. It was only after someone on this forum pointed them out did I find out that the bike had them.
Most of these things on their own are pretty minor and not a big deal, but combined they are a bit concerning. All this being said, so far I really like the bike and everyone that I had talked with at the Trek stores have been super friendly and helpful (or at least have attempted to be helpful), but one of the main reasons I bought a Trek and paid a premium is for what I thought would be a better experience than going with a smaller company (or one that had less presence in the US). Now it's only been about a week, so hopefully I will have better experiences going forward and I am going to try another LTBS to see if the experience is better there.
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